Wind losses can involve roofing, siding, windows, flashing, and water intrusion that shows up later. When these connections aren’t documented, claims stall.
Initial estimates often focus on the most visible damage and miss related components, secondary impacts, or system-level requirements that affect proper repairs.
Documentation Gaps
Photos, measurements, and notes may not fully capture the extent of the damage, how it occurred, or how far it extends beyond obvious areas.
Policy Interpretation
Coverage decisions depend on how damage is classified and documented. When policy language isn’t applied consistently, scope and payment disputes follow.
Wind damage is established through physical evidence, material displacement, fastener failure, and surrounding damage patterns. Clear documentation ties the observed damage to wind forces rather than age or maintenance issues.
Can wind cause interior damage?
Yes. Wind can compromise roofing, siding, flashing, or openings, allowing water intrusion that leads to interior damage. Interior impacts are often secondary and may appear after the initial event.
What if the carrier disputes causation?
Disputes usually stem from unclear documentation. When the cause of loss is supported with consistent evidence and tied to the policy language, explanations become more stable and defensible.