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Roof storms & insurance claims in Woodbury, NJ

Radar recorded severe or damaging hail over Woodbury, NJ on 9 days in the last two years, the largest an estimated 0.87" on April 4, 2025. The storm's date is what decides a roof claim here, so check the exact date over your own address before you file.

10,138 residents · radar window 2024-07-19 to 2026-07-18

Radar hail days (2 yr)
9
Largest radar estimate
0.87" penny
Verified damaging events
7

Radar figures are NOAA MRMS estimates of hail size aloft near the city centre — modeled, not measured, and never a confirmation that hail hit a specific roof. Verified events are NOAA’s quality-controlled Storm Events record; preliminary reports are spotter reports awaiting it.

City averages don’t decide claims — your address does.

Look up the exact storms whose swath crossed your roof in Woodbury, with dates an adjuster can check.

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The rules of the game in New Jersey

Roofing and insurance are governed state by state — who may sell you a roof, what your deductible can look like, and how long you have to act all depend on New Jersey law. Each item below cites where it comes from.

How wind & hail deductibles work here

In New Jersey, insurers may apply a percentage hurricane deductible — up to 5% if mandatory, up to 10% if optional (N.J.A.C. 11:2-42.9) — that is triggered only by a hurricane named by the National Weather Service from which sustained winds of 74 mph or greater have been measured in New Jersey by the NWS. Per the uniform policy language in Exhibit D (incorporated by reference in N.J.A.C. 11:2-42.7), it applies to loss caused by wind, wind gusts, hail, rain, tornadoes, or cyclones resulting from that hurricane and to damage from wind-driven objects (Loss of Use is excluded); it replaces any other applicable deductible for that event and can never be less than the Section I deductible amount shown on the Declarations. Under N.J.A.C. 11:2-42.8, the insurer must give a plain-language notice with each new policy and each renewal that states whether the deductible is mandatory or optional, the circumstances and conditions under which it applies, how it affects settlement of a claim (with a specific example), and where the deductible provision may be found in the policy or endorsement.

Source: N.J.A.C. Title 11, Ch. 2, Subch. 42 — Exhibit D (Appendix; trigger, covered perils, deductible replacement, never-less-than-Section-I floor), § 11:2-42.7 (incorporates Exhibit D), § 11:2-42.8 (notice requirements), § 11:2-42.9 (up to 5% mandatory / 10% optional) (2026-07-19)

Matching: must the insurer replace undamaged shingles?

New Jersey has no specific law or regulation requiring your insurer to replace undamaged roofing or siding just so a repair matches in appearance. Under the state's Unfair Claims Settlement Practices rules, N.J.A.C. 11:2-17.10 requires that property claim settlements be fair and equitable and that repairs be allowed in accordance with generally accepted standards for safe and proper repairs, but its explicit "like kind and quality" matching language applies to automobile aftermarket parts, not dwelling roof or siding. Whether you get matching materials for a partial roof or siding loss depends on your own policy wording, so read your homeowners policy and, if a claim is underpaid, you can file a complaint with the NJ Department of Banking and Insurance.

Source: New Jersey Administrative Code N.J.A.C. 11:2-17.10 (Rules for fair and equitable settlements applicable to property and liability insurance), NJ Dept. of Banking and Insurance / Unfair Claims Settlement Practices (2026-07-19)

Deadlines that decide claims

In New Jersey, an insurer must commence investigation of a homeowners (first-party) claim within 10 working days of being notified (N.J.A.C. 11:2-17.7(a)) and must pay a first-party property claim within 30 calendar days after it receives properly executed proof of loss (N.J.A.C. 11:2-17.7(c)). The general statute of limitations to sue for breach of a homeowners insurance contract is 6 years (N.J.S.A. 2A:14-1), but most policies contain a shorter contractual suit-limitation clause — commonly one year from the date of loss — which New Jersey courts enforce, with that period tolled (paused) from the time the insured gives notice of loss until the insurer formally denies the claim (Peloso v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., 56 N.J. 514 (1970)). Because the policy's own one-year deadline usually controls, do not wait: file suit well before the anniversary of the loss unless the insurer has clearly agreed in writing to more time.

Source: N.J.A.C. 11:2-17.7 (NJ Unfair Claims Settlement Practices, via Cornell LII); N.J.S.A. 2A:14-1; Peloso v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., 56 N.J. 514 (1970) (2026-07-19)

Insurer of last resort

Yes. New Jersey has an insurer of last resort called the New Jersey Insurance Underwriting Association, known as the FAIR Plan. It provides basic property coverage for homes, mobile homes, rental units, and most commercial buildings and business property when you cannot obtain insurance from any other source. The standard policy does not include personal liability coverage, and theft coverage is not automatic but has been available since 2009 as an optional attachment. You should consider it only after being rejected by a standard insurer, and you may apply directly or through any licensed agent.

Source: New Jersey Department of Banking and Insurance (NJDOBI) — NJ Insurance Underwriting Association (FAIR Plan) (2026-07-19)

Buying or selling: what must be disclosed

New Jersey is not a pure caveat-emptor state for home sales. As of August 1, 2024, under the Real Estate Consumer Protection Enhancement Act, sellers of residential property must give the buyer a signed, completed Property Condition Disclosure Statement before the buyer becomes contractually obligated to purchase, disclosing to the best of the seller's knowledge the condition of the property — including known roof problems such as leaks, damage, or past repairs. Beyond the printed form, a seller is under a legal obligation to disclose any known material defect that is not apparent or readily observable to the buyer, and selling a home "as-is" does not excuse hiding a known defect.

Source: N.J.A.C. 13:45A-29.1 (New Jersey Property Condition Disclosure Form), NJ Division of Consumer Affairs; delivery/timing requirement from the NJ Real Estate Consumer Protection Enhancement Act (effective Aug. 1, 2024) (2024-08-01)

What homeowners pay here

In New Jersey, the average annual premium for the HO-3 homeowners insurance policy form was $1,417 in 2022, and the average across all owner-occupied homeowners policy forms was $1,422. These NAIC figures are compiled from data insurers report to regulators, so an individual quote can run higher or lower depending on the home's value, location, and coverage limits. New Jersey's averages run modestly below the 2022 countrywide averages of $1,569 for HO-3 and $1,559 across all owner-occupied forms.

Source: NAIC (National Association of Insurance Commissioners), 2022 Homeowners Report, Table 4 — New Jersey, "2022 Average Premium by Amount of Insurance," Dwelling Fire and Homeowners Owner-Occupied Policy Forms (report pages 93-94; © 2025 NAIC). Countrywide comparison from the same report's Countrywide Table 4 (pages 31-32). (2026-07-19)

When the insurer won't move: file a complaint

In New Jersey, homeowners file insurance complaints with the New Jersey Department of Banking and Insurance (DOBI), which regulates insurers operating in the state. Complaints are handled by its Consumer Inquiry and Response Center. You can file online through the department's insurance complaint form, by mail to NJDOBI, PO Box 471, Trenton, NJ 08625-0471, or by phone at 1-800-446-7467 (or 609-292-7272). A written complaint must include the company or agent name, the policy/certificate or claim number, a brief description of the problem, and documentation to substantiate your position, such as your Policy Declarations page and any claim denial notice.

Source: New Jersey Department of Banking and Insurance — Consumer Information / How to Request Assistance (2026-07-19)

Worth knowing

Severe storms — the thunderstorm wind and hail events that most often damage roofs — are New Jersey's most frequent billion-dollar weather disaster, accounting for 32 of the 75 such disasters (42.7%) the state experienced from 1980 through 2024. These events are also striking far more often: New Jersey averaged 1.7 billion-dollar disasters a year over the full period but 5.2 a year in 2020–2024. Because wind and hail damage is now a near-annual risk statewide, homeowners should inspect their roof after every major storm and photograph its condition before storm season to establish a baseline for any future insurance claim.

Source: NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI), Billion-Dollar Weather and Climate Disasters — New Jersey state summary (2026-07-18)

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