Few things frustrate homeowners more than paying premiums for years, filing a legitimate claim after a storm, and receiving a denial letter. Denials happen — but they aren't always final.
Common Reasons Claims Get Denied
- Pre-existing wear: Adjusters may attribute damage to age rather than the recent storm
- Cosmetic damage only: Some policies exclude appearance-only hail marks if function isn't affected
- Missed filing deadline: Policies require prompt notice — delays hurt your case
- Insufficient documentation: No photos, no contractor report, or vague damage descriptions
- Incorrect cause cited: Damage attributed to lack of maintenance rather than weather
Steps to Take After a Denial
Read the denial letter carefully
It should cite a specific policy section. Compare that language to your declarations page.
Request a reinspection
Ask for a second adjuster visit with your roofing contractor present. A trained eye on-site can point out functional damage the first inspection missed.
Gather stronger documentation
Date-stamped photos, weather reports for the storm date, and a detailed contractor report strengthen appeals.
File a formal appeal
Your insurer has an internal appeals process. Follow it exactly — deadlines and required forms matter.
When to Involve a Public Adjuster or Attorney
For large claims with significant disagreement on scope, a licensed public adjuster can advocate on your behalf. Legal counsel is a last resort but appropriate when substantial damage and clear policy language align.
Crestline helps Atlanta homeowners document damage thoroughly from the first inspection — the best denial prevention is strong evidence upfront. See our insurance claims guide for the full process.