Insurance Guide · Updated February 2026

How to File a Roof Insurance Claim in Florida (Step-by-Step)

Filing a roof insurance claim in Florida can feel overwhelming, especially right after a storm. This guide walks you through the process step by step — what to do immediately, how to document damage, when to call your insurance company, and how a licensed roofer helps you get what you're owed.

Step 1: Document the Damage Immediately

As soon as it's safe after the storm, document any visible damage:

  • Take photos and videos of all exterior damage (roof, siding, gutters, screens, fencing)
  • Photograph any interior water damage (ceiling stains, wet walls, water on floors)
  • Note the date and time of the storm
  • Save any weather alerts or news coverage about the storm event

Do not climb on your roof. Leave roof-level documentation to a licensed professional. Ground-level and interior photos are enough to start the process.

Step 2: Prevent Further Damage

Florida insurance policies require you to take "reasonable steps" to prevent further damage after a loss. This means:

  • Place buckets under active leaks
  • Move furniture and valuables away from affected areas
  • Call a roofer for emergency tarping if your roof has open damage

Emergency tarping costs are typically covered by your insurance policy. We provide same-day emergency tarping across Polk County — call (863) 360-6804.

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Step 3: Call Your Insurance Company

File your claim as soon as possible. Florida law requires you to report damage "promptly" — don't wait weeks or months. When you call:

  • Have your policy number ready
  • Describe the damage and the storm event that caused it
  • Ask for your claim number and the name of your assigned adjuster
  • Ask about your deductible amount
  • Request an adjuster visit (they'll schedule an on-site inspection)

Step 4: Get a Professional Roof Inspection

Before the insurance adjuster arrives, have a licensed roofing contractor inspect your roof. A professional inspection provides:

  • Timestamped photos of all damage (roof-level detail the adjuster needs)
  • Itemized repair/replacement estimate in a format adjusters accept
  • Damage assessment identifying issues the untrained eye would miss

Our free roof inspection includes all of this — and we can attend the adjuster meeting with you.

Step 5: Meet the Adjuster On-Site

When the insurance adjuster comes to inspect, have your roofer present if possible. Insurance adjusters are generalists — they may not identify all roof damage. Your roofer can:

  • Point out damage the adjuster might miss
  • Explain roofing-specific issues in terms the adjuster understands
  • Provide their own inspection report and estimate for comparison

We attend adjuster meetings at no extra charge as part of our storm damage service.

Step 6: Review the Insurance Estimate

After inspection, your insurance company will send an estimate. Compare it against your roofer's estimate. Common issues:

  • Missed damage: The adjuster may not have identified all damage. Your roofer's report can support a supplement request.
  • Scope disagreement: The insurer may approve a repair when a replacement is needed. Your roofer's documentation helps dispute this.
  • Pricing below market: Insurance estimates sometimes use pricing below what local contractors actually charge. Your roofer's estimate provides market-rate evidence.

If the insurance estimate seems low, you have the right to request a re-inspection or file a supplement with additional documentation. We help with this process.

Step 7: Get the Work Done

Once the claim is approved, choose a licensed, local roofing contractor (not a storm chaser) to complete the work. Make sure they:

  • Hold a valid Florida roofing contractor license
  • Pull proper permits from Polk County
  • Provide a written contract and warranty
  • Don't require full payment before starting work

What to Avoid

  • Don't sign an AOB (Assignment of Benefits) without understanding what you're signing. An AOB transfers your insurance claim rights to a third party.
  • Don't hire storm chasers — out-of-state crews that go door-to-door after storms, collect deposits, and disappear.
  • Don't wait too long — Florida has time limits on filing claims. File promptly after discovering damage.
  • Don't make permanent repairs before the adjuster inspects — temporary measures (tarping) are fine and expected, but hold off on permanent work until the adjuster has seen the damage.

Need Help with a Roof Insurance Claim?

American Roofing FL helps Polk County homeowners navigate the insurance claims process every week. We provide free inspections, timestamped documentation, itemized estimates, and on-site adjuster meetings — all at no cost to you.

Call (863) 360-6804 or submit our form to get started.

About the Author

Written by the team at American Roofing FL — licensed (CCC1334393), insured, and locally owned in Winter Haven, FL. We handle storm damage claims across Polk County and help homeowners get fair treatment from their insurance companies.