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Pillar Guide

Texas Storm Damage Roofing Guide

Texas leads the nation in severe hail and wind events. Understanding what actually damages a roof - and how to respond - protects your home and your wallet.

Last updated October 2025 · Reviewed by Texas roofing professionals

Every year, Texas homeowners across the DFW metro, Central Texas, and the Gulf Coast deal with supercell thunderstorms capable of producing damaging hail, straight-line winds, and tornadoes. Even storms that look minor from the ground can cause roof damage measured in thousands of dollars.

The three storm forces that damage Texas roofs

Hail, wind, and wind-driven debris each damage roofs differently. A proper professional roof inspection separates cosmetic damage from functional damage that affects roof performance.

Hail

Review our detailed hail damage guide to learn what bruising, granule loss, and mat fractures look like on asphalt shingles, metal, and tile.

Wind

Our wind damage guide covers shingle uplift, creasing, seal failure, and how wind damage differs from hail.

Wind-driven debris and water

Branches, loose siding, and fascia damage often accompany severe storms. For active leaks, use our emergency roof leak checklist.

After a storm: what to do

  • Photograph hail on the ground with a coin for scale
  • Walk the perimeter checking gutters for shingle granules
  • Look for bent gutter covers, dented flashing, and damaged screens
  • Avoid climbing the roof yourself
  • Request a documented professional inspection

Insurance considerations

Most Texas homeowner policies carry a separate percentage-based wind/hail deductible. Before filing, review our roof insurance claim process and common claim mistakes.

Hail

DFW sits inside the national hail alley. Collin, Denton, and Tarrant counties record more severe hail events per capita than almost any other metro.

Heat

Summer roof-deck temperatures above 160F accelerate asphalt aging. Light colors and balanced ventilation meaningfully extend shingle life.

Roof age

DFW housing stock averages 15 to 25 years of roof age depending on submarket, with 2005-to-present construction dominating northern suburbs.

Claims

DFW files more residential wind-hail claims per year than any other Texas metro, with well-documented inspections improving outcomes.

DFW hail and wind: what the last decade has actually done to roofs

The Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex has recorded severe hail events in every year of the past decade, with at least one billion-dollar storm impacting residential roofs somewhere in the nine-county metro every calendar year since 2016. Collin County alone has logged more than 40 distinct hail events with stones at or above one inch in diameter during that span. Tarrant and Denton counties trail closely. Dallas County, while slightly lower in raw event count, produces the highest total insured losses because housing density concentrates the damage.

What those numbers mean for an individual DFW homeowner is simple: even a roof that has not been obviously "hit" has almost certainly cycled through multiple marginal storm events. Marginal events are the ones that shorten lifespan without triggering a filed claim. Sub-cosmetic bruising accumulates. Seal strips release. Underlayment pinholes form. By year ten, a shingle that looks fine from the driveway is often measurably thinner at the mat than it was at installation, and the next real storm becomes the one that pushes it past the threshold.

How DFW adjusters actually walk a roof

An experienced Texas independent adjuster working a DFW hail claim typically spends 30 to 60 minutes on the roof. They will chalk out a ten-foot-by-ten-foot test square on each elevation, count functional hail strikes inside the square, measure soft-metal dent patterns on vents and flashing, and check for directional damage consistency across elevations. If the counts exceed carrier-specific thresholds on at least the front and one other elevation, the roof is typically approved for full replacement at replacement-cost value minus deductible. If only one or two elevations hit the threshold, partial approvals are common and are often the most contested outcome in DFW claims.

Wind patterns specific to DFW

Straight-line wind events in DFW produce distinctive damage patterns that differ sharply from hail. Shingle creasing running parallel to the eaves, missing tabs in diagonal strips, ridge-cap loss along north and west-facing exposures, and underlayment exposure in 6-to-12-tab patches are the most common wind signatures across the metroplex. The 2019 Dallas tornado event, the 2021 Fort Worth-area derecho, and the 2024 McKinney wind event each left recognizable patterns that adjusters and roofers still reference when evaluating current storm claims.

Licensed Texas professionals

All DFW inspections fulfilled by RoofDog Roofing or authorized partners.

No deductible games

Texas law prohibits absorbing a wind-hail deductible. We follow it.

Storm-cycle tested

Built on real DFW hail and wind claim experience since 2016.

Frequently asked questions

Within 7–14 days is ideal. Most homeowner policies include timeframes to report damage, and documenting the roof quickly helps establish storm-event causation.

Just went through a Texas storm?

Request a documented roof inspection before you file any insurance claim.

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