Wind damage inspection guidance before the sales conversation.

Inspection for lifted, creased, missing, or storm-loosened shingles. This page keeps service, trade, product, and CTA context attached to inspection requests.

Service intent

What this page needs to make clear.

BuildIQ service pages should answer the searcher's immediate question and move them toward a contextual inspection request.

Distinguish sudden wind damage from old, brittle, or worn shingles.

Help homeowners understand lifted, creased, missing, and loosened shingle patterns.

Route inspection requests with location and service context attached.

Inspection focus

What should be checked first.

Missing or lifted shingles

Creases, tears, and exposed underlayment

Age-related brittleness that can change repair options

Homeowner questions

Questions this page should answer.

Is this wind damage or normal roof aging?

Can a few shingles be repaired safely?

What documentation should the inspection include?

Related products

Materials and components that may show up in the scope.

Related guides

Articles that support this decision.

Storm damage / Jun 7, 2026

What Huntington homeowners should check after a hail storm

A calm first-pass checklist for documenting visible damage, avoiding rushed commitments, and knowing when a roof inspection is worth scheduling.

Read article

Roofing decisions / Jun 5, 2026

Roof replacement vs roof repair: how to think about it

The decision is less about the cheapest fix today and more about whether the repair actually lowers risk for the next few years.

Read article

Insurance claims / Jun 3, 2026

What to know before filing a roof insurance claim in Indiana

A claim is a documentation process, not just a phone call. Photos, timing, policy details, and inspection quality shape what happens next.

Read article

Context-aware CTA

Ask whether this home needs wind damage inspection.

Request Inspection

Local service entry points

Route this service into launch markets.