Storm Damage Insurance Claims | Milwaukee Roofing Contractor | Generations Roofing
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Storm Damage — Milwaukee & Waukesha County

Your Roof
Has Storm Damage.
Here's What to Do.

Generations Roofing & Remodeling inspects Milwaukee and Waukesha County roofs, documents storm damage with photographs and measurements, and provides the accurate written estimates your insurance company needs to evaluate your claim. No pressure. No obligation. Just honest work.

Free storm inspection — no obligation
Detailed photo & written damage report
Accurate line-item repair estimate
Licensed & insured contractor
Licensed & Insured
Photo & Written Damage Reports
CertainTeed & TAMKO Certified
Same-Week Inspections Available
Serving Milwaukee & Waukesha County
What We Provide

How Generations Helps With Your Claim

We're not insurance adjusters — we're the licensed roofing experts who give you the documentation and estimates you need to go into that conversation prepared.

Professional Damage Documentation

We walk your roof, photograph every area of concern with high-resolution dated images, measure affected sections, and identify storm-related damage versus normal wear. You receive a report your insurer can evaluate against your policy.

Accurate Written Estimates

A complete line-item repair or replacement estimate using current Milwaukee-area material and labor pricing. Your adjuster compares their scope against real numbers from a local licensed contractor — not a national average database.

On-Site Adjuster Coordination

With your express written consent, a Generations representative can be present when your insurance adjuster inspects the roof. We can point out what we found, answer the adjuster's questions about materials, and make sure nothing is overlooked.

Transparency — Wisconsin Law

What We Can & Cannot Do Under Wisconsin Law

Wisconsin law draws a clear line between what a licensed roofing contractor can do and what requires a public adjuster license. We follow that line and tell you exactly where it is.

Know Before You Call

What Generations Can and Cannot Do

Wisconsin law is specific about what a licensed contractor may do in connection with insurance claims. We are transparent about both sides so you can make informed decisions.

What We Can Do

Inspect your roof and document all visible storm damage
Provide detailed photographs, measurements, and written assessment of damage
Prepare an accurate professional repair or replacement estimate
With your express written consent, discuss our damage findings with your insurer's representative
Be present on-site during your scheduled adjuster inspection if you request it
Complete the approved repair or replacement scope with quality materials and workmanship
Submit a supplemental estimate if additional damage is discovered during work

What Wisconsin Law Prohibits

Negotiating, representing, or acting on your behalf with your insurance company
Waiving, paying, or rebating any portion of your insurance deductible
Accepting an assignment of your insurance policy proceeds
Guaranteeing a specific claim outcome or payment amount
Providing legal or insurance coverage advice
Soliciting you for work while storm damage is actively occurring
Submitting any claim document directly to your insurer on your behalf

Need someone to negotiate your claim? Only a Wisconsin-registered public adjuster can legally negotiate insurance claims on your behalf. The Wisconsin OCI maintains a public list of registered adjusters at oci.wi.gov. For disputed or denied claims, a property insurance attorney is another option.

How It Works

The Storm Damage Claims Process in Wisconsin

Filing a storm damage claim in Milwaukee or Waukesha County follows a predictable path. Understanding each step helps you move through it with confidence — and avoid the missteps that lead to underpaid or denied claims.

Identify and Document the Damage

After a hail or wind event, visually inspect from the ground for missing shingles, granule loss, dented gutters, or damaged flashing. Do not attempt to walk on your roof without proper equipment. Photograph everything you can see from the ground, including any indoor signs like ceiling stains or attic leaks. Document the date of the storm — most policies require timely reporting.

Call a licensed roofer for a professional on-roof assessment before filing

Get a Professional Contractor Assessment

A trained roofing contractor — not a salesperson — should walk your roof to identify and document all storm damage. Generations provides this at no charge. We photograph every area of concern, measure the impact points, and prepare a written assessment of what we found and what repair or replacement would require. This document becomes your evidence when talking to your insurer.

Free inspection by Generations — no obligation to use our services

Contact Your Insurance Company

You — not your contractor — file the claim directly with your insurer. Call the number on your policy declarations page, report the storm date and visible damage, and request an adjuster inspection. Ask your insurer what documentation they need upfront. Keep a written record of every conversation, including the date, time, and name of the person you spoke with.

You must file the claim yourself — a contractor cannot file on your behalf

Adjuster Inspection

Your insurer will send an adjuster to inspect the damage. This adjuster works for the insurance company, not for you. You have every right to have your roofing contractor present during this visit. Your contractor can point out what they found but cannot negotiate scope or price with the adjuster on your behalf. Take notes during the inspection and ask the adjuster for a copy of their findings.

Ask the adjuster: "How long until I receive the written scope and settlement offer?"

Review the Settlement Offer

Your insurer will provide a written scope of loss and a settlement amount. Compare this to the contractor's estimate you already have. If the insurer's scope misses damage your contractor documented, you can ask your insurer to reconsider specific line items in writing. If the discrepancy is significant, this is when a licensed public adjuster or attorney becomes valuable.

Do not sign any release forms until you are satisfied with the full settlement amount

Approve Work and Schedule Installation

Once your claim is approved and you have selected a contractor, work can be scheduled. Wisconsin Act 24 requires contractors to include specific language in contracts about whether work is insurance-related. You also have a 3-business-day right to cancel your contract if your claim is later denied in whole or in part.

Wisconsin law gives you 3 days to cancel if your claim is denied after signing
Generations Roofing contractor inspecting and photographing hail damage on a Milwaukee residential roof for insurance documentation

Generations crew documenting storm damage in Milwaukee County

Red flag: If a contractor promises to "cover your deductible," handle everything without your involvement, or asks you to sign over your insurance rights — walk away. These practices violate Wisconsin law and were the subject of a $6,000 OCI enforcement action in October 2025.

Your right: If you feel your insurer is acting in bad faith — delaying, denying, or underpaying without basis — you can file a complaint with the Wisconsin Office of the Commissioner of Insurance at oci.wi.gov.

Understanding Your Policy

ACV vs. RCV: Which Coverage Do You Have?

The single most important thing to know about your homeowner's policy is whether it pays Actual Cash Value (ACV) or Replacement Cost Value (RCV) for roof damage. The difference can be thousands of dollars out of your pocket.

FactorActual Cash Value (ACV)Replacement Cost Value (RCV)
What it paysDepreciated value of your roof at time of lossFull cost to replace with like materials, minus deductible
DepreciationWithheld permanently — you absorb the gapWithheld initially, released after work is completed
Out-of-pocket costDeductible + depreciation amountDeductible only (after completing the work)
20-year-old roof exampleMay pay 20–40% of replacement costPays full replacement cost minus deductible
Older homesMore common on aged homes / older policiesStandard on most current policies if endorsed
How to checkLook at your policy declarations page. Find the term "roof settlement" or "functional replacement cost." Call your agent if unclear.

RCV policies have a deadline. Most RCV policies require you to complete repairs and submit for the recoverable depreciation within a set period — often 6 to 12 months after the initial settlement. Missing this deadline means you forfeit the holdback. Ask your insurer for your specific deadline in writing.

Documentation That Matters

What Quality Damage Documentation Looks Like

The strength of your insurance claim depends heavily on how thoroughly the damage is documented before your adjuster visits. Here is what Generations captures during every storm inspection.

High-Resolution Photography

Every damaged section documented with close-up and wide-angle shots. Photos are dated and geotagged. We capture impact craters, granule loss, cracked or split shingles, and dented metal components — roof to gutters to flashing.

Written Damage Report

A clear written narrative of what we found: which roof planes were affected, nature of damage (impact, wind, hail), approximate density of hits per 10-square-foot area, and whether the damage affects the roof's water-shedding ability.

Roof Measurements

Precise square footage and pitch calculations for each roof plane. Accurate measurements prevent underestimation of the scope of work — one of the most common reasons insurance settlements fall short of actual repair costs.

Storm Date Correlation

We cross-reference damage patterns against National Weather Service storm records for Milwaukee and Waukesha County. Establishing that damage is storm-related — and occurred on a specific date — is essential for coverage eligibility.

NWS Milwaukee: weather.gov/mkx →

Material-Specific Findings

Different roofing materials show storm damage differently. Asphalt shingles show bruising and granule loss. Cedar shake cracks along the grain. Metal panels dent or crease. Our inspection notes are specific to your material type so damage isn't misidentified as wear and tear.

View all roof types we service →

Full Written Estimate

A complete line-item repair or replacement estimate using current market pricing for materials and labor in the Milwaukee and Waukesha County area. This gives your adjuster a precise, defensible scope of work to evaluate against your policy.

Try our cost calculator →
Know Your Rights

Common Reasons Claims Are Underpaid or Denied in Wisconsin

Not every denial is final, and not every low settlement is correct. Understanding why claims get undervalued helps you ask the right questions.

Damage attributed to wear and tear. Insurers may claim damage was pre-existing deterioration rather than storm impact. Dated storm photography and professional damage reports that identify specific impact patterns are your counter-evidence.
Partial scope offered instead of full replacement. Insurers may approve patching a few shingles when matching or functional replacement of the entire affected plane is warranted. A second opinion from a licensed roofer helps establish whether partial repair is viable.
Missed accessory damage. Gutters, flashing, soffit, fascia, skylights, and other components damaged in the same storm event may be overlooked in an adjuster's inspection. A thorough contractor assessment covers every roof component, not just the shingles.
Outdated or incorrect pricing. Insurance software pricing databases don't always reflect current Milwaukee-area material and labor costs. Compare the insurer's estimate line-by-line against your contractor's current market estimate.
Delayed reporting assumed to invalidate the claim. While prompt reporting is required, Wisconsin courts have held that late reporting does not automatically void coverage unless the delay actually prejudiced the insurer's ability to investigate.

If Your Claim Is Denied or Underpaid

A denial or low settlement offer is not necessarily the end of the road. You have options — and Generations can provide updated documentation to support any of the following paths:

Request a Re-Inspection

Ask your insurer to assign a different adjuster and conduct a new inspection. Provide your contractor's documented findings and any photos or storm data the original adjuster may have missed.

Invoke the Appraisal Clause

Most homeowner policies include an appraisal clause allowing each party to hire their own appraiser to resolve a scope dispute. Review your policy or ask your agent whether this applies to your situation.

Hire a Licensed Public Adjuster

A Wisconsin-registered public adjuster can legally review your policy, evaluate the scope of loss, and negotiate with your insurer on your behalf. They work for you, not the insurance company.

File a Complaint with Wisconsin OCI

If you believe your insurer is unreasonably delaying, denying, or underpaying your claim, file a complaint at oci.wi.gov. The Wisconsin Office of the Commissioner of Insurance investigates insurer conduct.

Consult a Property Insurance Attorney

For significant disputes, a Wisconsin property insurance attorney can evaluate your policy language, advise on bad-faith claims, and pursue litigation if warranted. The State Bar of Wisconsin's referral service can help you find qualified counsel.

Choosing a Contractor

Choosing a Milwaukee Storm Damage Roofing Contractor

After a major storm, Milwaukee and Waukesha County are flooded with out-of-state contractors and storm-chasers. Here is how to tell the difference between a legitimate local contractor and one to avoid.

Signs of a Trustworthy Contractor

Holds a current Wisconsin contractor's license
Has verifiable local presence — office, reviews, history
Provides a detailed written estimate before work starts
Explains exactly what they can and cannot do under Wisconsin law
Uses manufacturer-certified materials with documented warranties
Pulls the required building permit with your municipality
Carries liability insurance and workers' compensation

Warning Signs — Walk Away

Offers to waive, cover, or "work around" your deductible
Asks you to sign an assignment of benefits before you agree to anything
Knocks on your door during or immediately after a storm
Promises they will "handle everything" with your insurer
Refuses to provide a written estimate before asking you to sign
Has no local address, no reviews, or just showed up after the storm
Pressures you to sign a contract before your claim is approved
Frequently Asked Questions

Storm Damage Claims — Wisconsin FAQ

No. Under Wisconsin Act 24 (Wis. Stat. § 100.65) and Wis. Stat. ch. 629, a residential contractor cannot negotiate, represent, or act on behalf of a homeowner in insurance claim discussions. Anyone doing so without a public adjuster license is subject to OCI enforcement action. Generations Roofing is a licensed contractor — we document damage and provide estimates. If you need someone to negotiate, contact a Wisconsin-licensed public adjuster or an attorney.
No. Wisconsin law explicitly prohibits any residential contractor from waiving, paying, or rebating any portion of an insurance deductible as an incentive for a homeowner to sign a contract. This applies to roof work and all other exterior repairs. Any contractor offering to cover your deductible is violating state law and potentially facilitating insurance fraud. Do not sign a contract with any such contractor.
ACV (Actual Cash Value) pays the depreciated value of your roof — meaning you absorb the difference between what your old roof was worth and what a new one costs. RCV (Replacement Cost Value) pays the full replacement cost minus your deductible, with depreciation released after work is completed. RCV policies are significantly better for older roofs. Check your policy declarations page and look for how the policy handles "roof settlement." Call your agent if the language is unclear — this decision is worth clarifying before you need it.
Wisconsin does not set a universal statute of limitations for homeowner insurance claims — your specific policy governs this. Most policies require "prompt" reporting and include a separate limitation period (often one or two years from the date of loss) for filing a lawsuit over a denied claim. Read your policy's "Duties After Loss" section. File as soon as you have documented evidence of damage and don't wait for multiple storm seasons to pass.
As a licensed Milwaukee roofing contractor, Generations can inspect your roof at no charge, document all visible storm damage with photographs and measurements, and provide a written professional damage assessment and repair estimate. With your express written consent, we may also discuss our findings with your insurance company's representative. This documentation gives your adjuster a thorough, professional scope of loss to evaluate — which matters significantly more than a vague verbal complaint. We cannot negotiate your claim, represent you, or guarantee any claim outcome.
A denial is not necessarily final. You can request a re-inspection with a different adjuster, invoke the appraisal clause in your policy if a scope dispute exists, hire a Wisconsin-licensed public adjuster to evaluate and negotiate on your behalf, or consult a property insurance attorney for bad-faith or coverage disputes. You can also file a complaint with the Wisconsin OCI at oci.wi.gov. Generations can provide updated documentation to support any of these paths.
No. In Wisconsin you have the right to choose your own licensed contractor regardless of what your insurance company recommends or which contractors are on their preferred list. Your insurer can specify the scope of work and the approved dollar amount, but the choice of contractor belongs to you. If your preferred contractor's estimate differs from the approved scope, discuss the discrepancy with your insurer before signing a contract or beginning work.
An AOB transfers your right to collect insurance proceeds directly to the contractor. Under Wisconsin law, public adjusters cannot request or accept assignment of insurance policy proceeds (Wis. Stat. § 629.10), and the Wisconsin OCI has enforced actions against contractors who used AOB-based business models. Be extremely cautious before signing any document that transfers your insurance rights to a third party. Consult your insurer or an attorney before signing anything you don't fully understand.

Think Your Roof Has Storm Damage?

Start with a free professional inspection. Generations documents what we find, gives you an accurate written estimate, and helps you understand your next steps — with no pressure and no obligation.

Mon–Fri 7AM–6PM  |  Sat 8AM–2PM Licensed & Insured — Wauwatosa, WI

Generations Roofing & Remodeling is a licensed roofing contractor, not a public adjuster, attorney, or insurance professional. We cannot negotiate insurance claims or guarantee claim outcomes. For claim disputes, consult a licensed public adjuster or property insurance attorney. Wisconsin OCI: oci.wi.gov.

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