What monsoon damage actually looks like in Mesa
Most monsoon damage we see is not dramatic. It's lifted ridge tiles, displaced bird stops, debris cracks at hips, and water intrusion at penetrations where flashing wasn't sealed correctly. Whole-roof failures from a single storm are rare. The bigger issue is that a partial failure (a lifted ridge, a cracked flashing) lets water in where it shouldn't be, and a week of dry weather hides the damage until the next storm.
If your gut says a storm did something, it probably did. We'll come out, walk the roof, and document it — whether or not you end up filing a claim.
How we handle insurance claims
- We document first, not sell. Our first job is a complete photographic scope of what the storm did, in a format your adjuster can work with.
- We meet the adjuster. When your carrier sends someone out, we'll be there. That conversation often determines whether the claim is approved for the full scope.
- We repair to spec. When the claim is approved, we restore the roof to its original specification or better. We don't quote a lower-grade material to pocket the difference.
- We never inflate a claim. If we don't believe damage on your roof is from a covered event, we'll say so. The trade's reputation suffers when roofers invent claims — we don't do it, and we won't.
When to call us after a storm
Call right away if:
- You see visible debris on the roof or in the yard after a storm.
- You find a new water stain on a ceiling.
- A neighbor's tree hit your roof or came close.
- A recent microburst or named storm passed through your area.
A free written inspection after a storm is the right move even if nothing looks wrong from the ground. Most monsoon damage is invisible from the yard.
