Digital Roof Product
Roof Storm Alerts — Know the Moment Hail Hits Your Zip Code
Real-time SMS and email alerts the moment hail, high wind, or tornado activity is recorded within 5 miles of your home. Document damage same-day — exactly what insurance carriers want.
Used by homeowners in 47 states
How it works
Enter your home address
We set up a 5-mile monitoring radius around your property, tied to NOAA’s real-time storm event feed.
Get alerts instantly
The moment a qualifying storm event is recorded near your home, you receive an SMS and email with the details.
Document and protect
Follow the same-day documentation checklist in each alert. Your monthly storm history report builds a cumulative record.
Insurance carriers have a simple rule: the sooner you document storm damage, the stronger your claim. Damage documented the same day as a storm event is nearly impossible to dispute. Damage reported weeks later? That’s when adjusters start asking uncomfortable questions.
The problem is that most homeowners don’t know a damaging storm hit their area until they notice a leak or see their neighbor’s roof getting replaced. By then, days or weeks have passed, and the window for same-day documentation has closed.
Our Storm Alert Subscription solves this by monitoring NOAA storm event feeds tied to your specific address. The instant hail (any size), high wind (58+ mph), or tornado activity is officially recorded within 5 miles of your home, you receive an SMS and email alert with the event details.
Each alert includes the NOAA event type, severity, and timestamp, along with a same-day documentation reminder. Take photos of your roof, siding, gutters, and windows while the damage is fresh — these become powerful evidence if you need to file a claim later.
Beyond real-time alerts, you receive a monthly storm history report for your address. This running log shows every recorded weather event in your area, creating a cumulative record that’s valuable for insurance purposes, home sale disclosures, and long-term roof maintenance planning.
The service covers any US address because NOAA’s storm event database covers the entire country. Whether you live in Tornado Alley, the Gulf Coast, the Midwest, or anywhere else that gets severe weather, the alerts work the same way.
At $4.99 per month with no contract and cancel-anytime flexibility, the subscription pays for itself the first time it alerts you to a damaging storm you would have otherwise missed. One successful insurance claim typically covers decades of subscription cost.
What's included
- Real-time SMS alerts for hail, wind, and tornado events
- Email alerts with NOAA event details
- Same-day photo documentation reminders
- Monthly storm history report for your address
- One free annual claim-readiness check
- Cancel anytime, no contract
$4.99/mo
Subscription· No hidden fees
Start storm alertsSecure checkout via Stripe. Delivered digitally.
Frequently asked questions
How quickly do I get alerted after a storm?
Alerts are sent as soon as the NOAA storm event is officially recorded, which is typically within 1-4 hours of the event. Our system checks the NOAA feed every 2 hours.
Will I get alerts for every thunderstorm?
No. We only alert on NOAA-recorded events that meet damage thresholds: hail of any size, wind at 58+ mph, and tornado activity. Routine thunderstorms without these conditions do not trigger alerts. Most subscribers receive 8-14 alerts per year, depending on location.
Can I monitor multiple addresses?
Yes. Each subscription covers one address. Property managers and landlords often subscribe for multiple properties. Each address is billed separately at $4.99/month.
What should I do when I receive an alert?
Each alert includes a same-day documentation checklist. At minimum, photograph your roof (from ground level is fine), gutters, siding, and windows. Date-stamp the photos. This creates a contemporaneous record that insurance carriers accept as evidence.
Does the monthly report include storms I wasn’t alerted about?
The monthly report includes all NOAA-recorded weather events in your area, including events below the alert threshold. This gives you a complete picture of weather exposure over time.
