Industry News

How to Prepare Your Roof for Hurricane Season

Jan 7, 2026 RRMasters Team
How to Prepare Your Roof for Hurricane Season

Hurricane Season Roof Prep: A Complete Guide for Mid-Atlantic Property Owners


Hurricane season brings high winds, heavy rain, and potential roof damage to the Mid-Atlantic region. For property owners, real estate investors, and property managers, a single storm can lead to thousands in repairs, tenant displacement, and insurance headaches.


The good news? Most major roof damage is preventable with the right preparation.


This guide walks you through every step to protect your property before the next storm hits.


SECTION 1: WHY MID-ATLANTIC PROPERTIES ARE AT RISK


The Mid-Atlantic region (Maryland, Virginia, Washington DC, Delaware, and southern Pennsylvania) faces unique risks during hurricane season:



The cost of waiting: A single roof leak from storm damage can cost 5,000 to

5,000 to 15,000 in interior repairs, not including the roof replacement itself.


SECTION 2: SCHEDULE A PROFESSIONAL INSPECTION


This is the single most important step you can take.


Have your roof inspected by professionals before storm season begins. A qualified inspector will identify:



How often: At minimum, once per year before hurricane season (May or early June). For older roofs (15+ years), consider two inspections annually.


RRMasters approach: We don't just look — we document every finding with photos and provide a written repair plan prioritized by urgency.


SECTION 3: CLEAN YOUR GUTTERS AND DOWNSPOUTS


Clogged gutters are one of the leading causes of storm-related roof leaks.


When gutters are blocked, water backs up under shingles, finds its way into fascia boards, and can even seep into your walls. During a hurricane with hours of continuous rain, this becomes catastrophic.

Proper gutter prep checklist:



Red flag: If you see water spilling over the sides of your gutters during a light rain, they are already clogged and will fail during a storm.


SECTION 4: TRIM OVERHANGING BRANCHES


Falling tree limbs cause more sudden, catastrophic roof damage than almost anything else during a hurricane.

What to look for:



Action steps:


Hire a certified arborist or tree service to trim any branch within 10 feet of your roof. This is not a DIY job for large limbs — a falling branch can easily kill or seriously injure someone.

Investor note: Document all tree trimming with before and after photos. This shows insurance adjusters you performed reasonable maintenance if a different tree causes damage later.


SECTION 5: CHECK YOUR ATTIC


Your attic tells the true story of your roof's condition. What you find there can reveal problems invisible from the outside.

Attic inspection checklist:



Why ventilation matters: A poorly ventilated attic traps heat, which can cause shingles to curl and age prematurely. Weakened shingles are far more likely to tear off in high winds.


SECTION 6: DOCUMENT YOUR ROOF'S CONDITION


Before storm season starts, create a photographic record of your roof. This is the #1 thing property owners skip — and the #1 thing insurance adjusters wish you had.

How to document properly:


  1. Take wide photos of each roof slope from ground level
  2. Zoom in on any existing damage, stains, or worn areas
  3. Photograph flashing around chimneys, skylights, and vents
  4. Capture gutter conditions and downspout locations
  5. Take interior photos of your attic ceiling and any existing water stains
  6. Save everything in a cloud folder or email it to yourself


Why this matters for insurance claims:


When you file a claim after a storm, the adjuster needs to distinguish between:



Without dated "before" photos, you may struggle to prove the storm caused the damage. With them, your claim is stronger and pays out faster.


SECTION 7: REVIEW YOUR INSURANCE POLICY


Many property owners discover too late that their policy has gaps.

Key questions to ask your agent before hurricane season:



Investor tip: For rental properties, consider ordinance or law coverage. If a storm damages your roof and local building codes have changed, this coverage helps pay to bring the roof up to current standards.


SECTION 8: EMERGENCY SUPPLIES AND CONTACTS


When a hurricane is forecast, pre-staged supplies save precious time.

Keep on hand:


Contact list (saved in your phone and printed):



KEY TAKEAWAYS FOR PROPERTY OWNERS AND INVESTORS



SECTION 9: WHAT TO DO IMMEDIATELY AFTER A STORM


Once the storm passes and it is safe to go outside:


  1. Walk your property and take photos of all damage (roof, siding, gutters, interior)
  2. Cover any active leaks with a tarp — even a temporary cover prevents interior damage
  3. Call RRMasters for emergency tarping and damage assessment
  4. File your insurance claim as soon as possible (claims queue up fast after major storms)
  5. Do NOT sign anything with a "storm chaser" contractor who knocks on your door


Warning on storm chasers: After every hurricane, out-of-state contractors appear offering "free inspections" and same-day repairs. Many take deposits and disappear. Always use established local contractors like RRMasters with verifiable licenses and local references.


DON'T WAIT UNTIL THE WATCH IS ISSUED


Preparation is not a one-day task. The steps above should be completed well before hurricane season officially begins (June 1 for the Atlantic basin).

Property managers with multiple buildings should start inspections in April. Investors with properties in different states should coordinate with local contractors now.

RRMasters offers pre-season roof inspections for property owners and investors throughout the Mid-Atlantic.


Our inspectors provide:



Call us at (301) 395-3057 to schedule your inspection before hurricane season arrives.



Back to Blog