A rushed inspection
An adjuster on a tight schedule may inspect one slope and estimate the rest. Our documentation covers every slope so nothing is assumed.
Storm & Insurance
We meet your adjuster on the roof, supply the documentation, and make sure your claim reflects the real scope of damage.
An insurance claim is only as good as the documentation behind it. When an adjuster spends fifteen minutes on a roof they have never seen, things get missed, and what gets missed comes out of your pocket. Our job is to make sure the evidence is complete and that everyone is looking at the same roof.
We are roofers, not public adjusters, and we never ask you to sign over your claim. We document the damage, write a clear scope, and stand on the roof with your adjuster so the approved amount matches the work the storm actually requires.
An adjuster on a tight schedule may inspect one slope and estimate the rest. Our documentation covers every slope so nothing is assumed.
Drip edge, ice-and-water shield, ridge venting, and code-required upgrades are routinely left off the first estimate. We make sure the scope includes everything the rebuild needs.
When you meet the adjuster alone, the conversation is one-sided. We are there with photos and measurements so the discussion is grounded in evidence.
There is no separate charge for claims support. It is part of how we handle storm work. You pay your deductible, and your carrier pays the approved scope for the covered damage.
We will never inflate a scope or file a claim that the damage does not support. If the storm did not do covered damage, we will tell you.
We provide insurance claims help across Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas, and Missouri. Each city has its own page with local storm context and the office that serves it:
We handle the roofing side: documentation, scope, the adjuster meeting, and any supplements for items missed on the first estimate. You file the claim and stay in control of it. We are not public adjusters and never take a percentage of your claim.
It happens, and it is usually about a few line items rather than the whole roof. We submit our photos and measurements as a supplement and let the evidence make the case. Most disagreements resolve once everyone is looking at the same documentation.
Yes. A documented inspection before you file tells you whether the damage is worth a claim and gives you a baseline to compare against the adjuster's scope. The inspection is free.
Free Inspection
Free, photo-documented inspections from any of our six offices. Same-day response when the weather turns.