Insurance Claim Roofing · DFW Metro · Updated

Texas Hail Damage Claim Guide (DFW Edition)

A start-to-finish walkthrough of a DFW hail-damage claim — first 72 hours, the adjuster meeting, supplements, and where the law draws the line on what a roofer can and can't do.

North Texas sits in the most active hail belt in the United States. From the spring supercells through the late-summer pop-up storms, the DFW metro averages more $1B-plus hail events than most states see in a decade. If you own a home in Frisco, Plano, McKinney, Allen, or anywhere across the metro, the question is not whether you will have to deal with a hail claim — it's how prepared you are when you do.

This guide walks the claim from the storm forward. None of it is legal advice or coverage advice. Talk to your insurance carrier for the specific call on your specific policy.

The first 72 hours after a DFW hail event

Hour 0 — during and immediately after the storm

Hour 1–24 — ground-level documentation

Hour 24–72 — the call to a roofer (not yet the carrier)

Red flag: The roofer who shows up at your door unsolicited within 48 hours of the storm. Storm chasers travel into DFW after major events. Texas roofers with a Frisco address are still here when the warranty matters.

Filing the claim

Once you have a roofer's inspection report and ground-level photos, you call your insurance company. Two things matter at this step:

1. You make the call, not your roofer

Texas Insurance Code §4102.163 reserves the licensed adjusting of an insurance claim for licensed professionals. A roofing contractor can document damage and prepare a written scope. The phone call to your carrier and any conversation about coverage stays with you. If a roofer offers to "handle the call" or "deal with the insurance company," that crosses into licensed claims work a contractor cannot perform — see the Texas Insurance Claim Roofing service page for the full breakdown. A roofer who crosses that line is also the kind of roofer who'll offer to absorb your deductible, which is illegal under HB 2102. The two behaviors travel together.

2. What to say on the call

Texas filing deadlines: most policies require notice within one year of the event under §542A.003. Practically, file within the first 30 days while the storm event is fresh.

The adjuster meeting

The carrier assigns an adjuster. The adjuster comes to the property — usually within 1–2 weeks, occasionally longer after major events when carriers are backed up. Two recommendations:

  1. Have your roofer on the roof with the adjuster. Not on the ground. On the roof. The adjuster will walk the slopes and note what they see; the roofer is there to point out what's easy to miss (subtle hail bruising, soft-metal damage, flashing failures, ice-and-water exposure in valleys, ridge cap, starter strip).
  2. Do not pressure the adjuster. The adjuster is doing their job under the carrier's rules. Pressure can backfire. Documentation cannot.

Frame's playbook on the adjuster meeting: our scope, our photos, their decision. We document; they decide what the policy covers.

The carrier scope and supplements

After the adjuster meeting, the carrier issues a scope of work and an estimate. The first scope frequently undercounts. Common gaps:

The supplement process: your roofer prepares written documentation of what was missed (photos, measurements, line items, code citations). You submit the supplement to your carrier. Many supplements are approved on the second look; some aren't. Outcomes are not guaranteed, and your roofer cannot advocate the supplement with the carrier on your behalf — that's licensed claims work a contractor cannot perform. They document; you submit; the carrier decides.

The two-check structure (on RCV policies)

If you're on a replacement cost value policy:

  1. First check (ACV portion) — paid at claim approval. Replacement cost minus depreciation, minus your deductible. This is the money to start the work.
  2. Second check (recoverable depreciation) — paid after work is completed and your roofer's final invoice goes to the carrier. This is the rest.

If you're on an ACV-only policy (the 15-year cliff), there is no second check — the depreciation comes out of your pocket. See our ACV vs RCV walkthrough for the carrier-by-carrier reality in 2026.

The roof replacement itself

By the time tear-off starts, the claim work is essentially done. The build is a roofing project like any other. A few DFW-specific items worth flagging:

What to avoid

What good looks like

A clean DFW hail-damage claim, start to finish, looks like this:

  1. Storm hits. You document ground-level damage with timestamped photos.
  2. Within 48 hours, a Frisco-based roofer does a free inspection and gives you a dated, line-item written scope tied to the NOAA storm event.
  3. You call your insurance company and open the claim. You provide the inspection report on request.
  4. The adjuster meets your roofer on the roof. Documentation is exchanged.
  5. The carrier issues a scope and ACV check.
  6. If items are missing, your roofer prepares supplement documentation; you submit; the carrier responds.
  7. Build starts. Class 4 shingles. Code-compliant install. 10-year workmanship warranty.
  8. Work is invoiced; recoverable depreciation check arrives.
  9. Permit closes. You keep the records.

That's the playbook. We run it on every claim. Free inspection: 214-308-9227.

Hail in DFW? Start With a Free Inspection.

Same-day inspection priority during storm events. No pressure, no door-knock games.

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