Wind damage and hail damage look completely different on a roof — and insurance adjusters handle them differently. Understanding the distinction helps you document your claim correctly.
How Wind Damages a Roof
Wind lifts shingles from the edges and valleys. It breaks the seal strips that hold shingles flat. Over time, repeated wind stress creases shingles at the bond line, creating weakness points where they’ll crack or lift off.
Wind damage patterns are directional — damage concentrates on the side facing the prevailing storm wind, typically south or southwest in Georgia storms. Edge and corner shingles are most vulnerable.
Signs of wind damage:
- Lifted, curled, or missing shingles
- Creased shingles along the bond line
- Exposed nails or fasteners
- Debris impact from flying objects
How Hail Damages a Roof
Hail falls vertically. It hits the entire exposed roof surface randomly. Damage is non-directional — impact marks distributed across all roof planes with no pattern related to wind direction.
Signs of hail damage:
- Circular impact marks (bruises) in random distribution
- Granule loss concentrated at impact points
- Dented vents, flashing, and gutters
- Split or cracked shingles at impact points
Why It Matters for Your Claim
Documentation strategy differs:
- Wind: photograph directional damage patterns, lifted shingles, missing sections
- Hail: photograph dented metal components, granule loss in gutters, impact distribution
Separate perils, potentially separate claims: If a single storm produced both wind and hail — common in Georgia supercells — you technically have two separate perils. Document them separately. If your wind deductible differs from your hail deductible, separating them matters financially.
The Most Common Mistake
Homeowners often describe all storm damage as “wind damage” because wind is the most visible. But if hail was present, the hail damage may be the more significant covered loss.
After any significant storm, assume both were present until proven otherwise.