Published July 12, 2026 · by San Juan Roofing Co.
Key takeaways
- Stop the water first with emergency tarping, then document damage before you clean up or repair.
- Wind and storm damage is usually covered; wear, age, and deferred maintenance usually are not.
- File promptly, meet the adjuster with a licensed contractor's written report, and repair last.
- An island-based crew tarps your roof the same day instead of waiting on the next ferry.
- West-side wind lifts shakes and shingles every winter, so photograph edges and ridges carefully.
A winter storm rolls off the strait, the west-side wind gusts harder than anything Anacortes sees, and by morning you have shingles in the yard and a stain spreading across the ceiling. What you do in the next few hours shapes both your home and your insurance claim. This guide walks San Juan County homeowners through storm damage roof repair and the wind roof damage insurance claim process, step by step.
After roof storm damage, stop the water first: get an emergency tarp over the breach, then document everything with photos and dates before you touch repairs. Call your insurer to open a claim, meet the adjuster alongside a licensed contractor’s written report, and only then authorize permanent repairs. Acting fast protects your home and strengthens your claim.
What should you do right after roof storm damage?
The single most important thing is to stop water from getting in, because interior damage compounds fast and insurers expect you to mitigate further loss. Work from the ground and stay off a wet, wind-loaded roof.
- Stop the water. Get an emergency tarp over the breach, or call us for storm & emergency roof repair and same-day tarping. Move furniture and valuables clear of active leaks and set buckets under drips.
- Document everything. Photograph the roof from the ground, the debris in the yard, and every interior stain. Note the date, the storm, and wind conditions. Timestamps and wide shots matter.
- Call your insurer. Open the claim promptly and write down your claim number and adjuster contact. Ask about your wind/hail deductible.
- Get two reports. Let the adjuster inspect, and have a licensed contractor provide a written scope with photos. Our on-island inspections and written estimates are free.
- Repair last. Authorize permanent repairs only after the loss is documented. Keep every receipt, including the tarp.
Do not pressure-wash, strip debris off the roof, or start real repairs before documentation — you can accidentally erase the evidence your claim depends on.
Does insurance cover wind and storm roof damage?
Most Washington homeowner policies cover sudden, accidental storm and wind damage. What they exclude is gradual wear: an old roof at the end of its life, moss rot on a shaded north slope, or leaks traced to deferred maintenance. The line between “covered peril” and “maintenance issue” is exactly where claims get denied, so honest documentation is everything.
| Usually covered | Usually NOT covered |
|---|---|
| Wind-lifted or blown-off shingles and shakes | Normal age and wear on an old roof |
| Torn or displaced flashing from a storm | Moss, algae, and rot on north slopes under fir |
| Tree limb or debris punctures | Damage from deferred maintenance |
| Sudden storm-driven leaks and interior water | Poor prior workmanship or manufacturer defects |
| Ice, freeze, or wind-driven rain intrusion | Cosmetic granule loss without a storm event |
If your roof was already near the end of its service life, an adjuster may only pay for a repair rather than a full replacement. That is where our honest repair-vs-replace advice helps — sometimes a targeted roof repair is the right call, and sometimes the storm is the tipping point toward replacement.
How does the San Juan County insurance claims process work?
Every carrier is a little different, but the sequence and rough timing look like this. Move through it in order and keep your paper trail tight.
| Step | What happens | Typical timing |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Document | Photos, dates, storm notes, interior damage | Same day |
| 2. Tarp / mitigate | Emergency tarping to stop further loss | Same day (island-based) |
| 3. File the claim | Call insurer, get claim number + adjuster | Within 24–72 hours |
| 4. Adjuster + contractor | On-site inspection; written scopes compared | 3–14 days |
| 5. Approval | Carrier issues scope and payment schedule | 1–3 weeks |
| 6. Permanent repair | Licensed crew completes the work | After approval |
A few dollar figures help set expectations. Emergency storm tarping typically runs $350–$4,000+ depending on roof size and access, and most tarps are reimbursable as loss mitigation. A covered storm repair commonly lands in the $450–$3,500 range, while a full storm-driven replacement runs $11,000–$40,000+. These are island-adjusted estimates for education, not a quote — a free on-island inspection gives you your real number.
One detail catches many homeowners off guard: how the payout is structured. Many policies pay actual cash value (ACV) up front — the depreciated value of the roof — and release the remaining recoverable depreciation only after the work is finished and invoiced. So your first check may look small even on an approved claim. Know your deductible (wind/hail deductibles are often a percentage of dwelling coverage, not a flat amount), confirm whether you have ACV or replacement-cost coverage, and keep every invoice so you can recover the held-back depreciation. We structure our written scope to match the carrier’s line items, which makes that final depreciation release far easier to collect.
Why does an island-based roofer matter after a storm?
Because ferries do not run on your emergency’s schedule. A mainland crew has to stage a truck, load materials, and wait for a sailing before they even reach the dock — and after a big blow, those boats fill up. As a licensed, bonded, and insured island-based contractor, we are already on San Juan, Orcas, and Lopez, so we can often tarp the same day. That speed limits interior water damage and directly strengthens your claim by showing you acted quickly to prevent further loss.
The island environment also shapes what we look for:
- West-side wind runs roughly 20% stronger than Anacortes and lifts cedar shakes and shingle edges every winter — we inspect ridges, hips, and rakes closely.
- ~40 inches of rain a year, heaviest in November, means a small lifted flashing becomes an interior leak fast.
- Salt air near the water corrodes cheap fasteners, so storm repairs on coastal homes use corrosion-resistant hardware and, on metal, marine-grade Kynar 500 / PVDF coatings.
- Moss on shaded north slopes under Douglas fir can mask storm damage, so we separate storm loss from pre-existing wear honestly in our report.
We serve Friday Harbor, Roche Harbor, Eastsound, Deer Harbor, Olga, Lopez Village, Shaw, and the outer islands including Waldron, Decatur, and Blakely.
How we work with your insurance adjuster
Claims go smoothest when the contractor’s scope and the adjuster’s estimate line up before work begins. Here is how we keep that friction low:
- We meet the adjuster on site and walk the roof together so nothing is missed or disputed later.
- We provide a written, photo-backed scope with island-adjusted pricing that reflects ferry logistics and off-island disposal — real costs a mainland estimate often understates.
- We document mitigation, including your emergency tarp, so it is credited as loss prevention.
- We flag repair-vs-replace honestly. If the storm only damaged one slope, we say so; if your roof was already failing, we tell you that too.
- We back the work with a workmanship warranty once repairs are complete.
You stay in control of your claim and your money. Our job is to make the roof right and give the adjuster clean, defensible documentation.
Get storm damage handled fast
If the wind just took part of your roof, do not wait for a ferry or a mainland backlog. Call San Juan Roofing Co. at (360) 205-1462 for same-day emergency tarping and honest, island-based storm damage roof repair. Start with a free on-island inspection and written estimate, or reach us through our contact page — we will help you stop the water, document the loss, and file a claim that holds up.
Frequently asked questions
Does insurance cover wind or storm roof damage?
What should I do right after storm damage?
How fast can you tarp a roof in the San Juan Islands?
Will filing a claim raise my premium or cost me out of pocket?
Do you work directly with my insurance adjuster?
Ready to move forward?
Talk to an island-based roofer — free inspection, honest advice.