Insurance claim roof replacement with Frame Restoration signage in Frisco, Texas

Texas Insurance Claim Roofing
in DFW

The roofing contractor that documents — and keeps licensed adjusting work where Texas law requires it. Frame Restoration is Frisco-based, BBB A+ rated, and built to make your insurance claim process boringly straightforward.

Quick Answer:

Frame Restoration is a Frisco-based, BBB A+ roofing contractor that helps DFW homeowners with the documentation side of roof insurance claims. We photograph damage, pull the NOAA storm event, prepare a written scope your insurance company's adjuster can read line by line, and meet the adjuster on the roof. We document the roofing scope and leave the licensed adjusting work to the licensed professionals — Texas Insurance Code §4102.163 reserves that work for them, and we operate on the right side of that boundary on every project.

The §4102.163 boundary, in plain English

Almost every roofer in the DFW hail belt talks about insurance claims. Very few of them are actually allowed to do what they imply they will do. Texas law draws a hard line between two activities:

  • Documenting roof damage and preparing a written scope of work — what a Texas roofing contractor like Frame does. This is the work side: photos, drone imagery, NOAA storm correlation, line-item estimates the carrier can read.
  • Handling the property insurance claim itself — what only a licensed professional can legally do. This is the coverage side: advocating on behalf of the homeowner, arguing line items with the carrier, advising on coverage decisions.

The statute that draws that line is Texas Insurance Code §4102.163. In Texas, licensed adjusting work is reserved for adjusters licensed by the Texas Department of Insurance. The rule is enforced — in 2017, a 1,500-review North Texas roofing company was found in violation of that line and ultimately settled with more than 3,000 homeowners. The case is a matter of public record at the Fort Worth Court of Appeals. We mention it because the practice it punished is still common in DFW, and it is exactly the practice we have built our process to avoid.

Frame Restoration documents storm damage and prepares scopes your carrier can read. We leave licensed adjusting work to the licensed professionals Texas law requires, we never offer to absorb your deductible, and we never tie pricing to the claim payout. The claim itself stays between you and your insurance company. Operating posture under Texas law — Texas Insurance Code §4102.163, §542A.003, 2019 deductible statute, Texas Department of Insurance.

HB 2102 — the Texas deductible rule

The Texas deductible law took effect September 1, 2019. The law makes two things explicit:

  • A Texas homeowner must pay the full deductible on a property insurance claim.
  • A roofing contractor cannot waive, rebate, or absorb the deductible — directly or indirectly. No "free upgrades," no rebates, no padded estimates designed to cover it.

Anyone offering to "take care of the deductible" is violating the Texas deductible rule and can void the claim. Frame Restoration contracts follow that rule on every job. For a deeper read on the law and the patterns that flag a deductible-fraud pitch, see our deductible-law guide for Texas homeowners.

ACV vs RCV — and the 15-year cliff

The fastest way to get blindsided on a Texas roof claim is to find out at the wrong moment that your policy pays actual cash value (ACV) instead of replacement cost value (RCV) on the roof. The difference is depreciation:

  • RCV pays what it costs to replace the roof today, materials and labor at current pricing.
  • ACV pays the replacement cost minus depreciation for the roof's age. On a 15-year-old roof, that gap can be five figures.

What we are seeing through 2025–2026 across DFW carriers:

The 15-year ACV cliff

State Farm, Allstate, and Farmers have routinely been converting roofs 15 years and older to ACV-only at renewal. The homeowner absorbs the depreciation gap on any future claim. Document the roof before renewal, not after the storm.

USAA still writes RCV

USAA remains one of the few major DFW carriers still writing replacement cost value on residential roofs as of 2026. For military families in Frisco, Plano, McKinney, and Allen, that policy posture is a meaningful renewal-time differentiator.

Concurrent Causation Rule

Texas applies the Concurrent Causation Rule: when covered (hail, wind) and excluded (wear, age, defect) damage show on the same roof, the homeowner carries the burden of separating them. Dated photos and a written scope build the evidence base under §542A.003.

For a full walkthrough, read our blog post on ACV vs RCV on Texas roofs. Frame Restoration does not represent USAA or any other carrier — confirm coverage directly with your insurance company.

Frame's process — boringly straightforward

Same in-house crew on every claim. Same written-scope policy. Same 10-year workmanship warranty. No deductible games, no inflated urgency, no pressure to file.

  1. Free inspection + storm documentation — we photograph the roof, soft metals, and related elevations. We pull the matching NOAA hail/wind event for the property's coordinates.
  2. Written scope, same day — a line-by-line estimate formatted so the carrier's adjuster can read it without translation.
  3. Adjuster meeting on site — we are on the roof with your insurance pro when scheduled. Our scope, our photos, their decision.
  4. Supplement documentation — if the carrier scope undercounts what we documented, we provide written supplement documentation. You submit the supplement to your carrier; we document it, we don't argue it.
  5. Build the approved scope — once your insurance company approves the scope, Frame's crew builds it. Deductible-law compliant contract throughout.

Common claim challenges in DFW

  • Waiting too long to file — under §542A.003, most Texas policies require notice within one year of the event. Check your specific policy; storm evidence weathers, so sooner is always better.
  • Accepting the first scope — initial adjuster scopes often miss soft metals, flashings, ridge cap, or starter strip. Without a contractor reviewing it, those items leave the claim.
  • No contractor on the roof — if your roofer isn't on site when the carrier's adjuster inspects, the documentation lives only in the adjuster's head.
  • Depreciation holdback — RCV policies pay in two checks. The recoverable depreciation comes after work is completed and invoiced. Many homeowners don't realize they can claim it.
  • Overhead and profit disputes — legitimate O&P is owed on jobs requiring three or more trades. Some adjusters try to deny it; documentation is how you protect it.

Texas Roof Insurance Claim Timeline

Step What Happens Timeline What Frame Does (and Doesn't)
1. Storm Event Hail, wind, or debris damages your roof Day 0 Call for a free inspection — 214-308-9227
2. Professional Inspection Frame photographs the roof and pulls the NOAA storm event Within 24–48 hours Free — full roof, gutter, and soft-metal photo survey
3. You File the Claim You call your insurance company to open a claim Within 72 hours of storm We provide documentation; you file. We do not call your carrier.
4. Adjuster Visit Your insurance company's adjuster inspects the roof 1–2 weeks after filing Frame is on the roof with the adjuster. Our scope, their decision.
5. Scope & Supplements Carrier issues a scope; we provide supplement documentation if items are missing 1–3 weeks We document; you submit any supplement. We document the claim, we don't handle the adjusting.
6. Roof Replacement Full tear-off and premium installation 1–5 days In-house Frame crew. 10-year workmanship warranty. Deductible-law compliant contract.
7. Final Inspection & Recoverable Depreciation City permit closeout; we invoice the completed work so you can recover depreciation (RCV policies) Same day to 30 days We handle the permit closeout and provide the final invoice.

Most Texas homeowners pay only their deductible on storm-damage roof replacements. The deductible is yours to pay under Texas deductible law — anyone offering to absorb it is not your friend.

Free Inspection. Honest Read.

Free claim-supported inspections across the entire DFW Metro. No pressure to file, no inflated urgency. Just a clean read on what's on your roof.

Schedule Consultation Call 214-308-9227

Other Services We Offer

Frame Restoration is more than just one service. Explore our full range of solutions.

Storm Damage Roof Replacement Residential Roofing Emergency Tarping Gutters

Service Areas Across the DFW Metro

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a roofer handle my insurance claim in Texas?

No. Texas Insurance Code §4102.163 reserves licensed adjusting work — advocating on coverage and arguing the claim with the carrier — for licensed professionals. A roofing contractor that advocates on coverage or ties pricing to your payout is crossing that line and putting your claim at risk. Frame Restoration documents damage, prepares a written scope your carrier can read, and meets the adjuster on site. The carrier's process stays between you and your insurance company.

What is the §4102.163 boundary?

It is the statute in the Texas Insurance Code that defines licensed adjusting work and restricts who can advocate on a property insurance claim. That work is reserved for adjusters licensed by the Texas Department of Insurance. The rule is enforced — in 2017 a 1,500-review North Texas roofing company was found in violation and settled with more than 3,000 homeowners. Frame Restoration is built to operate on the right side of that boundary on every project.

What is the Texas deductible rule?

The 2019 Texas deductible law took effect September 1, 2019. Under the law, a Texas homeowner must pay the full deductible on a property insurance claim, and no roofing contractor may waive, rebate, or absorb it. Any roofer who offers to cover your deductible — through free upgrades, rebates, or padded estimates — is violating the rule and can void your claim. Frame Restoration's contracts follow the rule.

What's the difference between ACV and RCV on a Texas roof claim?

RCV (replacement cost value) pays what it costs to replace your roof today. ACV (actual cash value) subtracts depreciation for the roof's age — on an older roof, ACV can be thousands less than the replacement bill. Through 2025–2026, State Farm, Allstate, and Farmers have routinely been converting roofs 15 years and older to ACV-only at renewal. USAA still writes RCV on residential roofs. Check your declarations page; the exact wording varies by carrier and policy date.

How does Frame Restoration handle insurance claims without acting as an adjuster?

We document the roof — photos, drone imagery, NOAA storm-event records, and a written line-item scope the carrier's adjuster can read. We meet the adjuster on the roof when requested. If the carrier's scope undercounts what we documented, we provide written supplement documentation; you submit the supplement to your carrier. We never call your insurance company on your behalf, never advocate on coverage, and never tie our price to the claim payout.

What is the Texas Concurrent Causation Rule?

Texas applies the Concurrent Causation Rule on property insurance claims. When a roof shows both covered (hail, wind) and excluded (wear, age, manufacturing defect) damage, the homeowner carries the burden of separating the two. Our written scope, dated photos, and storm-event documentation give you the evidence base under §542A.003.

☎ Call 214-308-9227