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Insurance Education

What Your Homeowners Insurance Policy Actually Says About Your Roof

Most DFW homeowners never read their policy until after a hail storm. This guide walks through the six sections that determine whether your roof claim gets paid — in plain language, before the adjuster ever shows up.

Logan Carpentier
Logan Carpentier T-Rock Roofing Team · May 29, 2026 · 10 min read
⭐ 4.9 Google Rating | A+ BBB | 65+ Years T-Rock | HAAG Certified Inspectors | Free Inspection

After a hail storm in Frisco, Plano, McKinney, or anywhere else in DFW, most homeowners pull out their policy for the first time in years. What they find is a 40-page document filled with undefined terms, numbered exclusions, and conditions that didn't seem to matter until now.

This guide covers the six sections that determine whether your roof claim gets paid — what they mean in plain language, and what to look for before you call your insurer. One important note upfront: this guide helps you understand how to find and read these sections, but it is not insurance or legal advice, and nothing here should substitute for a conversation with your own insurance agent or a licensed public adjuster about your specific policy. What I can do is make sure your roof is documented thoroughly before anyone makes those decisions.

Start With the Declarations Page

The Declarations page — the "Dec page" — is the summary sheet that comes with your policy renewal every year. It's usually the first two to three pages of your policy packet, and it's where the most important coverage numbers live. The Texas Department of Insurance provides a plain-language guide to reading it, which is worth bookmarking before storm season.

When you open your Dec page, look for these items:

Coverage A (Dwelling): This is the coverage that applies to your home's physical structure — the walls, roof, attached garage, and built-in systems. The dollar figure next to it is the maximum the insurer will pay for a covered structural loss. Your roof claim comes from this bucket.

Coverage B (Other Structures): A detached garage, fence, or storage building lives here. If your main house roof is damaged, Coverage A is what matters. If a detached structure is also hit in the same storm, that comes from Coverage B.

Your deductible: More on this below — but on the Dec page, look carefully for whether you have one deductible or multiple. If you see separate line items for "Wind/Hail" and "All Other Perils," you have a split deductible. The amounts may differ significantly from each other.

Named peril vs. open peril: Some policies only cover named perils — specific events listed in the policy (fire, lightning, hail). Open peril policies cover everything except what is specifically excluded. Check your Coverage A description to understand which type you have. Most standard homeowners policies in DFW are open peril for the dwelling.

The Most Important Distinction: RCV vs. ACV

This is the single most consequential line in your policy for a DFW hail claim — and many homeowners don't know which type they have until after a storm. Replacement Cost Value (RCV) and Actual Cash Value (ACV) determine how much your insurer actually pays when the claim is approved.

Policy Type What It Pays Example: 15-yr Roof, $14,000 Replacement Cost Your Out-of-Pocket
RCV
Replacement Cost Value
Full cost to replace at today's prices, minus your deductible $14,000 − deductible Deductible only
ACV
Actual Cash Value
Replacement cost minus depreciation for the roof's age and condition May pay $7,000–$9,000 after depreciation is applied Deductible + depreciation gap ($5,000–$7,000+)

On an ACV policy, your insurer calculates how much value your roof has lost due to age and wear — then deducts that from the payout. For a 15-year-old roof, that depreciation figure can be substantial. You're responsible for the gap between what the insurer pays and what the new roof actually costs.

How to find which you have: Look for the words "actual cash value" or "ACV" in your Coverage A description or in the Loss Settlement section of your policy. If you see it, you likely have an ACV policy for roof coverage. If you don't see it, you may have RCV — but confirm with your insurance agent directly. This is one of the most important questions to ask when you call them after a storm.

Some policies use a hybrid structure: ACV at the time of initial payment, with the ability to recover the depreciation amount (called "Recoverable Depreciation") after repairs are completed and documented. These policies require you to finish the work and submit proof before the held-back amount is released. Ask your agent whether your policy works this way.

Your Wind and Hail Deductible May Not Be What You Think

This is the discovery that surprises DFW homeowners most consistently. Many assume their deductible is the flat dollar figure they've known for years — say, $2,500. What they find after a hail storm is that they have a separate, higher deductible that applies specifically to wind and hail damage.

How Percentage Deductibles Work in North Texas

Instead of a flat dollar amount, your wind and hail deductible may be expressed as a percentage of your home's insured value — typically 1–2% in the DFW area. A home insured for $400,000 with a 2% wind/hail deductible means $8,000 out of pocket before coverage applies. For newer Collin County homes insured at $500,000–$600,000, a 2% deductible can exceed $10,000–$12,000. This is your actual exposure on a hail claim — not the smaller "all other perils" deductible you may have in mind.

Texas sits in one of the highest hail-frequency zones in the country, which is why insurers began separating this coverage years ago. The percentage-based wind/hail deductible has become increasingly standard across DFW homeowners policies, particularly in high-claim-frequency areas like Collin County.

Where to find yours: Look at your Declarations page for sections labeled "Named Storm Deductible," "Wind/Hail Deductible," or "All Other Perils." If the deductible figures differ between those sections, you have a separate wind/hail deductible. If you see a percentage next to one of those sections, multiply it against your insured dwelling value — that's your actual out-of-pocket exposure for a hail claim.

Knowing your deductible structure before storm season matters. Understanding it lets you make an informed decision about whether to file a claim for any given storm event — or whether a smaller repair is better handled out of pocket to protect your claims history. Your insurance claims process starts with knowing these numbers.

Duties After Loss: The Section You Can't Skip

Every homeowners policy contains a section called "Duties After Loss" or "Duties in the Event of Loss." This is where your obligations as the policyholder are spelled out — the steps you must take after a covered event to preserve your right to file a claim. Skipping these steps, or waiting too long, can give an insurer grounds to limit or deny coverage.

Most Duties After Loss sections in Texas homeowners policies require the following. Check your own policy for the exact language — this is a summary of what commonly appears, not a substitute for reading your specific document.

  • Give prompt notice to your insurer. Report the potential loss as soon as reasonably possible after you discover it. There is no single universal Texas state law that mandates one filing deadline for all homeowners policies — your policy's specific Duties After Loss language controls. When in doubt, report promptly rather than waiting. You can file the notice and schedule a professional inspection at the same time.
  • Protect the property from further damage. If your roof has active damage after a storm, you're expected to take reasonable steps to prevent additional loss — such as authorizing a temporary tarp. Keep records and receipts for any emergency repairs you authorize. Failure to mitigate can affect your claim.
  • Cooperate with the insurer's investigation. Allow the insurance adjuster to inspect the property when scheduled. Provide documentation they request — photos, written damage notes, records of any emergency repairs made.
  • Provide documentation of the damage. For a roof claim, this means a written scope of what was damaged. A professional inspection report completed before the adjuster arrives gives you an independent, dated record of the roof's condition — exactly what this duty calls for.
  • Submit a signed proof of loss if requested. Some insurers require a formal sworn statement of loss within a specified timeframe. Your agent can walk you through this if your policy includes it.

"Prompt notice" is the obligation most homeowners overlook. Reporting a potential loss doesn't commit you to anything — it preserves your options. You can file the notice and schedule your own professional inspection at the same time. In fact, after any significant DFW hail event, getting both steps started quickly is the right move. The full post-storm timeline is covered in the 24-hour post-storm action guide.

Get Your Roof Documented Before the Adjuster Arrives

I'll make sure we produce a thorough written inspection report — photos, damage types, scope, and materials — that you can bring to your adjuster visit. Call or text me and I'll get someone out same day.

Request a Free Inspection

or call / text me directly: 214-903-9290

Four Exclusions Every DFW Homeowner Should Know

All homeowners policies contain exclusions — categories of damage they won't pay for, regardless of what caused it. For DFW roof claims, four exclusions come up consistently enough that every homeowner should understand them before they need them.

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Cosmetic Damage Exclusions

Some Texas policies now include a clause limiting or denying coverage for damage the insurer classifies as "cosmetic only" — affecting appearance without a functional breach or active leak. These exclusions have become more common in DFW. Check your exclusions section for the word "cosmetic." If you believe damage is functional and the insurer disagrees, a licensed public adjuster can review your specific claim.

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Ordinance or Law Gaps

A standard policy pays to restore your roof to pre-loss condition — not to bring it up to current building code. "Ordinance or Law" coverage fills that gap. In DFW neighborhoods built in the 1990s–2000s, current code requirements for sheathing, ventilation, or ice-and-water underlayment may differ from when your roof was originally installed. Ask your agent if your policy includes this coverage.

Wear, Tear & Deterioration

Normal age-related wear is never covered, under any policy. If an adjuster attributes some damage to deterioration rather than a storm event, that portion won't be paid. A professional inspection report completed before the adjuster arrives establishes an independent dated record — helpful when distinguishing storm-caused damage from pre-existing wear on older roofs in Allen and Plano.

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Matching Requirements

If hail damages only one section of your roof, some insurers pay to replace only that section — potentially using materials that don't match the rest of your roof in color or texture. Texas law and your policy's specific terms determine how matching is handled in your situation. Your insurer or a licensed public adjuster can clarify what applies.

How to find exclusions in your policy: Look for a section labeled "Losses We Do Not Cover," "Exclusions," or "What Is Not Covered" — it's typically a numbered list in or following the Coverage A section. The four items above are worth scanning for specifically. If you find language you don't understand, your insurance agent is the right person to interpret it — not your roofer.

Who to Call for What After a Storm

One of the most common points of confusion after a DFW hail event is knowing which professional handles which part of the process. The roles are legally distinct — and mixing them up can create real problems. Here's how they break down.

1

Your Insurance Agent

Call first for coverage questions: What deductible applies? Do I have RCV or ACV? Is this damage type covered? Your agent can clarify your specific policy language.

2

A Licensed Public Adjuster

If your claim is disputed or you believe it was underpaid, a public adjuster — licensed by the Texas Dept. of Insurance — is legally authorized to negotiate on your behalf.

3

A Roofing Contractor

Call for physical damage documentation — a thorough inspection and written scope. We cannot interpret your policy, advise on coverage, or negotiate with your insurer. That is not our legal role.

4

Texas Dept. of Insurance

For complaints, claims guidance, or to verify a contractor or adjuster is properly licensed. Visit tdi.texas.gov — they publish homeowner rights resources specifically for storm claims.

What a Pre-Adjuster Inspection Report Does for You

When we inspect a roof in Prosper, McKinney, or anywhere across DFW before the adjuster's visit, we produce a written scope — photos, damage types, affected areas, materials and dimensions, and the date of the inspection. That documentation is yours.

It doesn't guarantee any outcome or tell the insurer what to pay. What it does is give you an independent, dated record of your roof's condition before the adjuster arrives, before any temporary repairs are made, before anything changes. You can share it with your insurance agent, your adjuster, or a licensed public adjuster. If the adjuster's written scope differs significantly from what was documented, you have a record to support a reinspection request or a supplemental claim.

The role of a professional inspection report is documentation — not advocacy or negotiation. We document everything that's visible and note what requires attention. What happens with that documentation and how your insurer evaluates it is between you and your insurer. For the step-by-step process from storm to final payment, the Texas roof insurance claim guide covers everything in order.

Frequently Asked Questions

Replacement cost value (RCV) pays the full cost to replace your roof at today's prices, minus your deductible. Actual cash value (ACV) subtracts depreciation — the estimated reduction in value due to the roof's age and condition — before calculating the payout. For a 15-year-old roof with a $14,000 replacement cost, an ACV policy might pay out $7,000–$9,000 after depreciation is applied. You're responsible for the gap. To find which type you have, check your Coverage A description or Loss Settlement section — look for the words "actual cash value" or "ACV." If you're unsure, ask your insurance agent directly before a storm, not after.
A wind and hail deductible is a separate, typically higher deductible that applies specifically to wind or hail damage claims — common in Texas because of the state's high hail frequency. Instead of a flat dollar amount, it's often a percentage of your home's insured value, typically 1–2% in the DFW area. A home insured for $400,000 with a 2% wind/hail deductible means $8,000 out of pocket before coverage applies. To find yours, look at the Declarations page for sections labeled "Named Storm Deductible," "Wind/Hail Deductible," or "All Other Perils." If the deductible amounts differ between those sections, you have a separate wind/hail deductible. Your agent can confirm which deductible applies to a specific storm claim.
"Prompt notice" means you're required to notify your insurer about a covered loss reasonably quickly after you discover it — but the specific timeframe varies by policy. There is no single universal Texas state law that sets one filing deadline for all homeowners policies; your policy's specific Duties After Loss language controls. Some policies state a specific number of days; others say "promptly" or "as soon as practicable." After a hail storm, the safest approach is to report the potential loss to your insurer quickly — you can file the notice and schedule a professional inspection at the same time. Check your Duties After Loss section for your exact language, and ask your agent if it's unclear.
Possibly. Some Texas homeowners insurance policies include a "cosmetic damage exclusion" that limits or denies coverage for damage the insurer classifies as aesthetic only — dented gutters, surface marks on shingles, or minor dings without a functional breach or active leak. These exclusions have become more common in Texas, particularly in high-hail-frequency markets like DFW. Check your policy's exclusions section for the word "cosmetic." If you believe hail caused functional damage and the insurer is classifying it as cosmetic only, a licensed public adjuster or insurance attorney can review your specific claim and policy language and advise you on your options.
Ordinance or law coverage pays to bring your home up to current building codes if a covered loss requires significant reconstruction. A standard policy pays to restore your roof to pre-loss condition — not to comply with current code requirements that weren't in effect when it was originally built. In DFW, where many homes were built in the 1990s–2000s under older standards, the gap between pre-loss condition and current code requirements can be meaningful for things like sheathing, ventilation, or underlayment. Ordinance or law coverage fills that gap. Check your Declarations page or ask your agent whether your current policy includes it and at what limit.
A roofing contractor can explain what physical damage was found during an inspection, provide a written scope of work, and describe the condition of your roof. What a contractor cannot do under Texas Insurance Code §4102.163 is interpret your specific policy language, advise you on whether damage is covered, or negotiate with your insurer on your behalf. Those activities require a license as a public adjuster or insurance attorney. For policy questions, your insurance agent is the right starting point. For a coverage dispute you believe wasn't handled correctly, a licensed public adjuster is your resource. The Texas Department of Insurance at tdi.texas.gov also publishes homeowner guidance on claims rights and how to file a complaint.
Look for the exclusions section in your policy document — typically labeled "Losses We Do Not Cover," "Exclusions," or "What Is Not Covered." Search that section for the word "cosmetic." If you find language that limits coverage to functional damage only, or excludes hail damage that doesn't result in a structural breach or active leak, you likely have a cosmetic damage exclusion. Your insurance agent can also confirm directly whether your policy includes this provision. If you're renewing or shopping for a new policy, ask this question before you sign: "Does this policy exclude cosmetic hail damage to my roof?"

Your homeowners insurance policy is a contract — and understanding its key sections before a storm is meaningfully better than discovering its terms at claim time. The Declarations page, RCV vs. ACV, your wind and hail deductible, Duties After Loss, key exclusions, and which professional handles which piece of the process: these are the sections that matter most when hail hits DFW.

For coverage questions about your specific policy, your insurance agent is the right starting point. For claim disputes or coverage negotiations, a licensed public adjuster can represent your interests. And if you need a thorough, documented inspection of your roof before the adjuster arrives — that's exactly what we're here for.

Request a Free Roof Inspection

Documentation matters — and it matters most before the adjuster shows up. I'll make sure your roof gets a thorough inspection and a complete written report you can bring to your claim.

Request a Free Inspection

or call / text me: 214-903-9290

Call or Text Logan — 214-903-9290