Storm & hail damage roof repair in Johns Creek
Johns Creek stretches along the Chattahoochee up in north Fulton, full of large homes on established, wooded lots and golf-community streets like the ones around St Ives. The rooflines out here are the complicated kind, steep pitches broken up by valley after valley and rows of dormers, and that complexity is exactly where wind and hail find their way in.
On these big cut-up roofs, the valleys and the dormer sidewalls do most of the work channeling water, so they are the first places storm damage turns into a leak. Wind gets under the steeper slopes and creases shingles along the many edges and hips, while hail dents the abundant flashing, the dormer step flashing, and the metal around all those roof penetrations where the dents show up clearest. The sheer number of transitions on a Johns Creek roof means there is simply more surface for a storm to work on than a simple gable roof would give it.
Steep, complex roofs like these are not something to judge from the ground or from a drone photo, because the damage lives in the valleys and behind the dormers where you cannot see it from below. Our free inspection is done on the roof, carefully, on the slopes and transitions that faced the storm. We check every valley, the flashing at each dormer and wall, and the soft metal where hail leaves its clearest marks, and we take dated photos of everything so you have a real record of it.
If what we find is storm related it can sometimes be a covered claim, and the honest documentation of what is actually up there is the part we handle. We run our own install crews and work north Fulton roofs like these all the time, so the people who navigate the valleys and dormers on your Johns Creek roof to inspect it are the same ones who come back to make the repair.
Free storm inspection in Johns Creek
We get on the roof, find the hail and wind damage, and show you photos of exactly what we find. No cost, no obligation.
Storm hit Johns Creek?
Get a free, no-obligation roof inspection from a local crew that knows the area, with honest photos of exactly what the storm did.