North Carolina homeowner filing a storm claim? Carriers want documentation first.
A typical asphalt shingle roof in North Carolina costs $11,000–28,000 to replace out of pocket. If storm damage is the reason you need one, your insurance should be paying — but the difference between "denied" and "approved" is almost always documentation. Coastal NC exposed to direct hurricane landfall; Piedmont region sees significant hail and wind. Our Insurance Claim Packet gives you adjuster-ready scope, NOAA storm verification, and a cover letter for North Carolina carriers like State Farm, Erie, Allstate. Delivered in under 12 hours.
Why it matters in North Carolina
What this means for homeowners in North Carolina
- North Carolina's top carriers (State Farm, Erie, Allstate, NC Farm Bureau) all use Xactimate line-item scopes. Our packet is formatted the same way.
- Peak claim season in North Carolina runs June through November. File fast — deductibles, statute windows, and depreciation math all change with time since the event.
- We pull NOAA storm verification for your exact address and date. Adjusters verify storm events first — skip the "there was no storm here" denial.
What you get
Inside your insurance claim packet
- NOAA storm event verification for your address
- Satellite before/after imagery (when available)
- Itemized scope of work (Xactimate-compatible line items)
- Photo documentation grid
- Replacement cost estimate (RCV)
- Cover letter to your adjuster
FAQ
North Carolina homeowner questions
Will my North Carolina insurance accept this packet?
The packet is formatted around the Xactimate line-item scope that all major carriers in North Carolina use, plus NOAA storm verification and adjuster-friendly cover copy. Most adjusters we've worked with read these packets before their own field report.
How long does delivery take?
Under 12 hours from order. Storm-season queues can stretch to 18 hours during peak weeks; we update you if your packet is in one of those queues.
Is this legal advice or a guarantee of approval?
Neither. It's documentation. Having better documentation improves your odds, but your carrier makes the final coverage call based on your policy and the actual damage.
