I won't be the only one in this boat...
So, who do you recommend?
So, who do you recommend?
In a lot of cases, it's not worth the cost. That's my honest opinion. You may pick up a discount, but you may also rope yourself into a marring clause and not be eligible for replacement, depending on your carrier. You need to check this CLOSELY. The last thing you want is an impact resistant shingle that is damaged from hail, voiding ALL manufacturer warranties, and then have the carrier tell you they won't cover replacing it. I have not had it personally happen yet, but I have heard of it happening in the state with some of my project managers. Just giving full disclosure. I am happy to sell Class IV shingles, but I don't think it's worth it for the average lifespan of a roof in Texas. Now, if you want to get real about impact resistance, look at standing seam...as they say...buy once, cry once.Kenneth_2003 said:
None for me yet in Spring...
But to piggyback on OPs discussion what are people's thoughts about impact resistant roofs? Any experience and any experience with HOAs and ACC?
Scott is damn good people! He and Histag tailgate with us and he has helped me a bit on some whiskey procurements!histag10 said:
My husband is a roofer with Holden in the Houston area.
Cepe said:
Thanks for the thread! I haven't had weather damage this go around but have previously in the past. Went through everything with USAA and ended up denied. That was several years ago.
I am looking to just pay cash for the equivalent to my deductible or close to it. Is that something that is normally done?
We went through a local company that coordinated the discussion with the insurance company. Had 3-4 pages of pictures of hail damage. We were denied and appealed. Engaged an independent evaluation during appeal and was denied a second time, even with all the evidence. Really hate insurance companies. . .histag10 said:Cepe said:
Thanks for the thread! I haven't had weather damage this go around but have previously in the past. Went through everything with USAA and ended up denied. That was several years ago.
I am looking to just pay cash for the equivalent to my deductible or close to it. Is that something that is normally done?
Maybe. Will depend on your deductible, how big your roof is, and what shingle you select.
It's also worth talking to a roofer who deals with insurance to see if they could get your roof bought through your insurance.
If you want to go the straight bid route- get a handful of quotes.
My husband (posted his card above) can get you a straight bid or talk to you about the possibility of insurance buying it and what that would entail.
Jason_Roofer said:
If anyone needs assistance, I'm happy to help. Email and contact in signature.
SnowboardAg said:
Based on my experience this year (2 houses with 2 claims), I would deal with insurance INDEPENDENT of the roofing contractor (bid multiple contractors with same scope of work). If a contractor asks for your insurance estimate or requests you to sign with them (letting them work with your insurance directly), I would recommend going elsewhere. Just my opinion.
SnowboardAg said:
I agree that insurance could leave off items and that's what a supplemental is for. Good luck getting insurance to change their pricing without their own general contractor / estimate (ie the appraisal process). They have pretty iron clad software that won't change the pricing, but will change quantities. The homeowner should hire a certified appraiser if they want to question insurance's estimate. Contractors may make their bid match the insurance estimate and that to me is NOT transparent to the homeowner. Imo dishonest.