These questions explain how Inspector Roofing and Restoration documents storm-related roof conditions before homeowners make claim, repair, or replacement decisions.
The Storm Damage Hub helps homeowners understand whether roof conditions may be storm-related, whether the findings are clear enough for insurance review, and whether filing a claim, repairing, replacing, or monitoring the roof makes sense before moving forward.
No. Inspector Roofing and Restoration documents roof conditions clearly and stays within its role as a roofing contractor. The company does not act as a public adjuster, interpret policy coverage, negotiate claims, or promise outcomes.
Claim-ready storm documentation may include wide-to-tight photos, roof-plane mapping, hail and wind indicators, soft metal observations, leak context, emergency tarping documentation, storm-event context, and organized findings that can be reviewed by homeowners, adjusters, and third parties.
Photos and video help preserve roof conditions in a reviewable format. They make it easier to understand where damage indicators are located, how roof areas are connected, and whether the file supports a repair, replacement, monitoring, or claim decision.
No. AI-assisted review can help organize, map, and group documentation, but final findings come from onsite inspection, documented roof conditions, and standards-aligned review by the roofing team.
Inspector Roofing and Restoration serves Alpharetta, North Atlanta, Greater Atlanta, Milton, Roswell, Johns Creek, Cumming, Sandy Springs, Dunwoody, Peachtree Corners, Duluth, Brookhaven, Woodstock, and nearby Georgia communities.
FAA-certified drone operations support safer aerial roof documentation, storm damage visibility, and cleaner evidence inside Inspector Roofing Protocols™.
Read the full Part 107 page →Learn how Inspector Roofing Protocols™ connects roof inspection, Haag-informed analysis, FAA Part 107 aerial documentation, and claim-verifiable evidence to cleaner Xactimate roofing scopes.
Open the Xactimate page →The Roof Repair Test is part of a larger inspection-first system. Explore these related pages to understand how roofing inspections, damage identification, and claim documentation work together.
Each of these pages builds on the same principle: inspection before assumption, and evidence before conclusions.
Storm damage can be missed when the roof is reviewed too quickly. Our process focuses on documenting what can be seen, photographed, and explained.