StormProof → for storm roofers
The homeowner believes you. Their carrier won’t.
You’ve marked the hits, photographed the bruising, and the homeowner still hesitates — or files, and the adjuster questions the date of loss. The missing piece is rarely more photos; it’s an official record tying a documented storm to that address and date.
What it does on the roof
- During the knock or the inspection: run the address (or email it to our inbox from your truck) — in seconds you have every NWS-recorded hail event within 1, 3 and 10 miles, with sizes and dates. “NWS records document 1.75-inch hail 2.1 miles from this address on May 28” lands differently than “trust me.”
- Leave it behind: the report is a permanent link, print-clean for PDF. It stays in the homeowner’s inbox making your case after you’ve left the driveway.
- When the claim stalls: the disputed-date finding plus the included appeal-letter draft gives the homeowner something concrete to send back — built entirely from cited public records.
Why it reads as evidence, not sales material
Reports are generated and hosted on HailEvidence — a neutral data site with a public methodology page and NOAA citations on every line. When the carrier checks the source, they find the official record, not roofer marketing. That’s the point.
Use it straight: NWS records are point and path observations. The absence of a nearby report does NOT prove that no hail fell at this address — it means no observation was logged nearby. A report of nearby hail documents the event; it does not by itself prove damage to a specific structure. Don’t oversell it — a report documents
the storm, your inspection documents the damage. Together they’re a strong file; apart, neither closes.
Numbers
$99/month, unlimited addresses, nationwide — one saved deal covers a year of it. Try it on a live job first: a single report is $29 on HailEvidence, no subscription.