Metal roofs don't blow off in a storm. That's the good news. The bad news: the damage is often invisible from the ground — and adjusters know it.
Read the Guide ↓Asphalt shingles leave obvious evidence — missing pieces, exposed decking, granule loss in gutters. Metal roofs hide their damage. A hailstorm can leave dozens of dents that compromise the coating and accelerate corrosion without a single visible leak for months. Wind events can back out fasteners or separate seams invisibly. Your insurer's adjuster may walk the roof, see no obvious damage, and deny the claim — unless you know what to ask for.
| Damage Type | What It Looks Like | Why It Matters | Visible From Ground? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hail dents | Circular dimples or spatter marks on panel surface | Breaks protective coating, exposes base metal to rust | Rarely |
| Coating damage | Chalking, peeling, or bare spots on painted surface | Accelerates corrosion significantly; voids manufacturer warranty | No |
| Seam separation | Gap or lift at standing seam joints | Allows water infiltration at panel edges — major leak risk | Sometimes |
| Fastener back-out | Raised screws or nails at panel attachment points | Reduces wind resistance; creates water entry points around fasteners | No |
| Panel uplift | Buckled, wavy, or raised panels along edges | Compromises waterproofing at overlaps; visible leak risk | Yes |
| Flashing damage | Bent, lifted, or displaced metal at roof edges, ridges, valleys | Primary entry point for water; often missed in adjustments | Sometimes |
Standard photo documentation is not enough for metal roof claims. You need specific evidence that adjusters and engineers look for.
Not all metal roofs are the same — and damage patterns differ significantly by panel type and installation method.
Most common on newer homes. Hidden fasteners mean seam separation and fastener back-out are the primary concerns. Hail dents often require microscopic inspection.
Screws visible on surface. Fastener back-out and rubber gasket failure are primary water entry points after wind events. Easier to inspect than standing seam.
Mimic asphalt or tile appearance. Hail damage often indistinguishable from normal surface texture. Require manufacturer-certified inspector for insurance claims.
Common on older Florida homes and outbuildings. Prone to seam separation and panel uplift. Fastener holes elongate over time, accelerating leak risk after wind.
Metal roof claims are denied at higher rates than shingle claims because damage is less obvious. These steps dramatically improve your outcome.
Standard roofers often miss metal-specific damage. Ask specifically for someone with metal roofing insurance claim experience. Their written scope of damage is your most important document.
Xactimate is the software insurers use to price claims. A contractor who can provide an Xactimate estimate speaks the adjuster's language and is far harder to lowball.
Insurers often classify hail dents as "cosmetic" to avoid full replacement costs. In most states, coating damage that accelerates corrosion is functional damage — not cosmetic. Document corrosion risk explicitly.
Metal roof denials are commonly reversed on supplement. A public adjuster who specializes in metal roofing claims works on contingency — they only get paid if you do.
Free inspection, written damage report, no obligation to hire. Serving 13 coastal states.
Insurance requirements, claim windows, and building codes differ significantly across our coverage area. Here's what metal roof owners in each region need to know.
Florida's high-velocity hurricane zone (HVHZ) in Miami-Dade and Broward counties requires metal roofing systems to meet specific Florida Building Code impact and wind ratings. Metal roofs in these counties must be NOA (Notice of Acceptance) approved. Hail cosmetic damage exclusions are common in Florida policies — push back with a corrosion risk argument.
Texas sees some of the most severe hail activity in the nation — the DFW metroplex alone averages over 100 hail events annually. Texas has strong consumer protections for roofing claims. The Texas Department of Insurance has specific guidance on metal roof hail damage assessment. Cosmetic damage exclusions are widespread but can be challenged if functional damage is documented.
Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama see significant hurricane wind damage to metal roofing systems — primarily seam separation and fastener back-out from sustained high winds. Salt air corrosion accelerates existing hail coating damage dramatically in coastal areas. Document corrosion acceleration as part of any hail claim within 50 miles of the Gulf.
The Atlantic coastal states from South Carolina through New York deal with nor'easters as much as hurricanes — sustained winds that stress seam integrity and fastener systems differently than short-duration hurricane winds. Maryland and Virginia have significant hail exposure. New Jersey and New York see more freeze-thaw cycling that works on metal seams over winter.
The FORTIFIED Home program — administered by the Insurance Institute for Business and Home Safety (IBHS) — sets construction standards that go beyond building code. For metal roofing specifically, FORTIFIED Silver and Gold designations require enhanced fastening patterns, specific seam geometry, and continuous load path connections.
A FORTIFIED-certified metal roof does two things for you after a storm: it dramatically reduces the likelihood of wind damage in the first place, and it provides documented construction specifications that make any damage claim significantly harder to dispute. Several Gulf states — including Alabama and Louisiana — offer insurance premium discounts of 20–40% for FORTIFIED designation.
If you are having a metal roof installed after a storm claim, ask your contractor specifically about FORTIFIED certification. The incremental cost is modest — and the insurance savings often pay it back within 3–5 years.
One of the most common reasons metal roof claims are partially denied is maintenance neglect. If an adjuster can point to existing corrosion, sealant failure at penetrations, or clogged gutters causing back-up onto the metal surface, they will attribute a portion of the damage to neglect rather than the storm event.
Walk the roof or hire a contractor annually. Document condition with dated photos. This creates a baseline that isolates storm damage.
Sealant at penetrations, stack boots, and end laps needs inspection every 5–7 years. Cracked sealant is a maintenance issue insurers cite to reduce payouts.
Metal roofs collect debris at valleys and gutters. Standing debris traps moisture and accelerates corrosion. Clear twice yearly in tree-heavy areas.
On exposed-fastener panels, check rubber gaskets every 5 years. Dry, cracked gaskets are a maintenance issue — not storm damage — in an adjuster's eyes.
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