What the Inspection Looks For
A post-storm inspection checks for the specific damage severe weather causes, and knowing what it looks for helps a Westport homeowner. Here is what an inspection examines.
Hail Damage
The inspection checks for hail damage, including dents or impact marks on the panels and any damage to the finish from hailstones. While quality metal resists hail well, significant hail can leave marks or affect the coating, which the inspection assesses. Hail damage is one of the key things examined after a hailstorm. The inspector looks for dents and finish damage. It is a primary focus after hail.
Wind Damage
The inspection examines for wind damage, such as lifted, loosened, or displaced panels and flashing, since high winds can stress the roof's components and loosen fasteners or edges. Wind can affect the roof's attachment and seals in ways that need checking. Wind damage is a major focus of a post-storm inspection. The inspector checks panels, edges, and flashing for lifting or loosening. It is key after high winds.
Debris Impact
The inspection looks for damage from flying debris, including impact marks, dents, or punctures from branches or other objects driven by the storm. Debris can strike the roof and cause localized damage that needs to be found and addressed. Debris impact is another thing the inspection checks for. The inspector examines for impact damage. It is part of a thorough post-storm check.
Fasteners, Seams, and Flashing
The inspection checks the fasteners, seams, and flashing closely, since these are where storm stress often shows up, with loosened fasteners, compromised seams, or lifted flashing being common subtle storm effects. These vulnerable points get careful attention. The fasteners, seams, and flashing are critical to examine after a storm. The inspector scrutinizes these spots. They are where subtle damage hides.
Overall Condition
The inspection assesses the roof's overall condition after the storm, confirming whether it came through well or identifying anything that needs repair. This comprehensive look ensures nothing is missed. The overall assessment ties together the specific checks into a clear picture of the roof's post-storm state. It gives a complete view. The inspector evaluates the whole roof. It provides the full picture.
What It Looks For, in Short
A post-storm inspection looks for hail damage, wind damage like lifted or loosened panels and flashing, debris impact, and problems with fasteners, seams, and flashing, assessing the roof's overall condition to confirm it is sound or identify needed repairs.
It also helps Westport homeowners to think through what a post-storm inspection actually involves and what to do with its results, so the process feels clear rather than daunting. The right time to get an inspection is reasonably soon after any severe storm that brought hail, high winds, or significant flying debris, without long delay, both so that any hidden damage can be caught before it has a chance to cause problems and so that there is timely documentation of the roof's condition. The inspection itself is a thorough, professional examination of the roof, with particular attention to the spots where storm damage tends to show up, the panels are checked for dents and finish damage from hail, the edges, seams, and flashing are examined for lifting or loosening from wind, and the fasteners are checked for any that have worked loose, along with a look for debris impact and an assessment of the roof's overall condition. The inspector then explains what was found and provides a clear report, which gives the homeowner an honest picture of where the roof stands. From there, the path forward is straightforward. If the roof came through well, the homeowner simply has peace of mind and needs to do nothing beyond normal care. If damage is found, the sensible response is to have it repaired promptly by a reputable contractor to restore the roof's protection, and if the damage is significant, to consider an insurance claim, keeping in mind that whether a particular claim is covered depends on the policy and the carrier, so this is general information rather than insurance advice and the homeowner should check their policy and consult their insurer. The inspection's documentation can be helpful in supporting any claim.
One point worth making clear for Westport homeowners is that the durability of metal roofing, which is one of its greatest strengths, can paradoxically be a reason to be more rather than less diligent about getting a professional inspection after a severe storm. A metal roof genuinely does come through most storms very well, far better than many other roofing materials, resisting wind, shedding hail, and standing up to the elements, and in many cases a post-storm inspection will simply confirm that the roof is sound and give the homeowner welcome peace of mind. But the same toughness that makes metal perform so well can also mask the subtle damage that severe weather sometimes causes, because the roof may continue to look fine from the ground and largely keep doing its job while harboring a small compromised spot, a few fasteners loosened by wind, a section of flashing slightly lifted, a seam that was stressed. These subtle issues do not announce themselves the way a missing shingle or a caved-in section would on another roof, and that is precisely what makes them worth finding, because left unnoticed, a small lifted flashing or a few loose fasteners can let water in gradually over weeks or months, and by the time a leak finally shows up on a ceiling inside, the hidden damage may have been admitting water for a good while and caused more harm than the original storm issue would have if caught promptly. So the value of a post-storm inspection is not that metal roofs are fragile, they are not, but that a professional who knows where storm damage tends to hide can examine the vulnerable points closely and catch the subtle problems a homeowner would understandably miss from the ground, allowing them to be sealed up before they ever become a leak.
It also helps Westport homeowners to think through what a post-storm inspection actually involves and what to do with its results, so the process feels clear rather than daunting. The right time to get an inspection is reasonably soon after any severe storm that brought hail, high winds, or significant flying debris, without long delay, both so that any hidden damage can be caught before it has a chance to cause problems and so that there is timely documentation of the roof's condition. The inspection itself is a thorough, professional examination of the roof, with particular attention to the spots where storm damage tends to show up, the panels are checked for dents and finish damage from hail, the edges, seams, and flashing are examined for lifting or loosening from wind, and the fasteners are checked for any that have worked loose, along with a look for debris impact and an assessment of the roof's overall condition. The inspector then explains what was found and provides a clear report, which gives the homeowner an honest picture of where the roof stands. From there, the path forward is straightforward. If the roof came through well, the homeowner simply has peace of mind and needs to do nothing beyond normal care. If damage is found, the sensible response is to have it repaired promptly by a reputable contractor to restore the roof's protection, and if the damage is significant, to consider an insurance claim, keeping in mind that whether a particular claim is covered depends on the policy and the carrier, so this is general information rather than insurance advice and the homeowner should check their policy and consult their insurer. The inspection's documentation can be helpful in supporting any claim.
Get a Thorough Inspection
Westport Metal Roofing inspects metal roofs thoroughly after storms across Westport and Decatur County, checking the panels, fasteners, seams, and flashing. Call {phone} for a free, thorough post-storm inspection of your roof.