Kinda late to the game, but here is my opinion:
Reasons we might not do it:1) replaced roof 5 yrs prior (pain in the a$$ dealing w/ Allstate but the did step up in the end)Your roofer should be making this as easy as possible. I try to limit what my customer has to 'deal with' in terms of the carrier. The adjuster meets me at the residence and often times doesn't even see the homeowner. He makes a determination. The customer sends me the approved scope of work, and then I do what I do, install the roof, collect his payment, my office handles the correspondence and invoicing with the carrier, they hash out details, the carrier sends final amount, the customer sends it in, the job and invoice is paid in full and were done.
2) insurance premium increase? (this entire area has been deemed a "documented disaster"); therefore my premiums may go up whether we do the roof or not?You are going to see an increase regardless of whether you do your roof. They cannot increase your premium because YOU did your roof. They can and will increase the premium because that area has 3 million roofs that have been hailed on three times this week.
3) just b/c a roofer and Allstate (have not filed) say we qualify for a new roof is it really compromised to a point that it needs replacement?This is a 'yesbut'.
Yes...but....your roofer, like myself, has a clear and concise idea of hail damage. Your carrier's idea is a lot more fluid. Either way, your roofer is the one you need to defer to in order to determine if the roof is compromised. The carrier is who we defer to in order to determine if the insurance will pay for it. Your roofer looks at roofs all day, every day. My idea of damage is based on what my manufacturer will consider damage. Any impacts on that roof from considerable hail will void any and all manufacturer lifetime warranties that were intact at the time it was installed.
We are MasterElite for GAF, Shinglemaster for Certainteed, and Platinum for Owens Corning. If I install your roof tomorrow, it comes with all the bells and whistles and lifetime warranties allowed under my credentials. If it hails on it Saturday, that all goes out the window. Its no longer warranted against defects from the manufacturer. This may or may not matter to you.
Also, be aware that your roof is not going to just up and start leaking this week unless you had the biggest hail, in which case, it probably still won't.
The last consideration is that your carrier KNOWS this area was impacted by hail. If you don't get a jump on it, then you risk having it denied because they are stingy after a a while, and then to rub salt in the wound, they may require an inspection prior to renewal. If they find hail, they won't renew, and they might not pay for it either.
If it's damaged, it would likely be prudent to go ahead and make a claim. If you like your roofer, make sure he is there when the adjuster comes out. Then you can discuss Class IV shingles. As state previously, they will come with a premium discount through Allstate, I believe it is 20%, but you should verify. When evaluating that decision, figure the cost vs. the discount vs. the amount of baseball sized hail you get and how often. That shingle is impact resistant, not hail proof.
You may want to look at standing seam roofing.
Hope this info is useful.
Houston-Austin-Dallas-San Antonio - Infinity Roofing - https://linqapp.com/jason_duke --- JasonDuke@InfinityRoofer.com --- https://infinityrooferjason.blogspot.com/