Tree-strike damage is one of the few roofing emergencies that demands action within hours — not days. Even if no limb is visible on the roof, impact damage can crack decking, displace trusses, and tear shingles in ways that aren't obvious from the ground.
Symptoms of Roof Damaged by a Falling Tree
- Tree or limb on the roof
- Visible hole or crushed area
- Sagging where the impact occurred
- Active interior leak
What Causes Roof Damaged by a Falling Tree in North Alabama
- Severe storms
- Diseased or dead trees
- High-wind events
- Ice/snow loading on weak limbs
Risks of Ignoring Roof Damaged by a Falling Tree
- Structural truss damage
- Electrical hazards if service drop is involved
- Rapid interior destruction
- Insurance complications without prompt mitigation
Why Roof Damaged by a Falling Tree Demands Quick Action
Across North Alabama, this problem rarely resolves itself — every rain, hailstorm, or windy afternoon makes the damage worse. Most homeowners who wait end up paying 2–4x more in interior repair, decking replacement, and mold remediation than if the roof was addressed in the first 30 days.
How We Fix Roof Damaged by a Falling Tree
Our local crews diagnose the actual source — not just the visible symptom — then deliver a documented, warrantied repair. We use manufacturer-approved materials engineered for the Tennessee Valley's heat, humidity, and severe-storm cycles, and every job includes photo documentation you can keep.
Insurance Help for Roof Damaged by a Falling Tree
If the damage is tied to a covered storm event in your Alabama policy, we help document the loss, file the claim alongside you, and meet your adjuster on the roof so the scope reflects every real impact — not a low-ball estimate.
Roof Damaged by a Falling Tree — Questions Answered
Should I remove the tree before calling you?+
Call us first. We coordinate with tree services and can tarp immediately after removal — sequencing matters.
Will insurance cover tree damage?+
Almost always yes — tree-strike is one of the most clearly covered perils on standard Alabama policies.
