Roof storms & insurance claims in Crewe, VA
Radar recorded severe or damaging hail over Crewe, VA on 5 days in the last two years, the largest an estimated 0.94" on July 9, 2025. The storm's date is what decides a roof claim here, so check the exact date over your own address before you file.
2,248 residents · radar window 2024-07-19 to 2026-07-18
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 Crewe, with dates an adjuster can check.
The rules of the game in Virginia
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 Virginia law. Each item below cites where it comes from.
Roofer licensing in Virginia
Virginia licenses contractors, including roofers, statewide through the Board for Contractors under the Department of Professional and Occupational Regulation (DPOR); a contractor performing or managing work valued at more than $1,000 must hold a license. The license class sets the dollar limit a contractor may take on: Class C covers a single project over $1,000 but less than $30,000, Class B covers $30,000 or more but less than $150,000, and Class A covers $150,000 or more (or $1 million or more of total work in any 12-month period). A homeowner should confirm both the license class and the roofing specialty, and can verify a contractor's license, class, and standing for free using DPOR's online License Lookup tool.
Source: Va. Code § 54.1-1100 (Virginia Board for Contractors / DPOR) (2026-07-18)
Public adjusters in Virginia
In Virginia, public adjusters (who represent the policyholder, not the insurer) must obtain a license from the State Corporation Commission (Bureau of Insurance), pass the Commission's prescribed pre-licensing examination, and maintain a $50,000 bond in favor of the Commonwealth. Their contract with you must be in writing, disclose the full fee/compensation, and give you the right to rescind within three business days of signing (five business days after a catastrophic disaster); if you cancel, the adjuster must return anything of value within 15 business days. For ordinary claims Virginia sets no fixed percentage fee cap — fees must be fair and reasonable in relation to the work performed — but during a declared catastrophic disaster an adjuster's compensation is capped at 10% of the insurance settlement proceeds. A public adjuster cannot require, demand, or accept any fee, retainer, deposit, or thing of value before your claim is settled.
How wind & hail deductibles work here
In Virginia, a home insurer may apply a special property deductible for wind, hail, or theft losses, so a separate wind/hail deductible is permitted. The amount of any property deductible may not exceed 10% of the dwelling limit of coverage, and no more than one deductible may be applied to a single loss. When a wind or hail storm damages your roof, check your declarations page for which deductible applies, since a percentage deductible on a high dwelling limit can be far larger than a flat dollar amount.
Source: 14VAC5-342-70 (Virginia Administrative Code, homeowners insurance policy regulation), Virginia State Corporation Commission Bureau of Insurance (2026-07-18)
Matching: must the insurer replace undamaged shingles?
Virginia has no law or regulation that specifically requires an insurer to replace undamaged roofing or siding so that repairs match in appearance. The state's binding claims-handling rule (14VAC5-400-90) only requires that a repair estimate be "an amount for which the damage may reasonably be expected to be satisfactorily repaired," which does not guarantee a color or texture match. Whether you get matching therefore depends on your individual policy language (such as "like kind and quality" wording or a matching endorsement), not on a state mandate. If you believe an insurer handled a mismatch unfairly, you can file a complaint with the Virginia Bureau of Insurance.
Roof age and your coverage
In Virginia, the homeowners insurance policy content standards require insurers to settle covered damage to the dwelling structure — including the roof — on a replacement-cost basis rather than stripped down to actual cash value. Under 14VAC5-342-70, actual cash value settlement is permitted only for a narrow list of items such as household and personal property, outdoor radio and television antennas, satellite dishes, and awnings. A covered roof loss should generally be paid at full replacement cost (subject to the policy's insurance-to-value conditions) rather than depreciated purely because of the roof's age, though carriers may initially pay actual cash value and release the withheld depreciation after the work is completed and documented.
Source: 14 Va. Admin. Code § 5-342-70 (Loss settlement condition), Virginia Bureau of Insurance homeowners policy content standards (2022-01-01)
Deadlines that decide claims
In Virginia, a homeowners policy carries the standard fire-policy suit limitation: you must file any lawsuit against your insurer within two years of the inception of the loss (when the loss began), not from when you discovered or reported it (Va. Code § 38.2-2105). Separately, once you notify your insurer of a claim, it must acknowledge receipt within 15 calendar days, and reply within that same 15-day window to any other pertinent communications that reasonably suggest a response is expected (14 VAC 5-400-50). After you submit a completed proof of loss, the insurer must promptly investigate and act reasonably on the claim. Missing the two-year deadline can permanently bar your claim, so do not let settlement talks run past it without filing or getting a written extension.
Source: Va. Code § 38.2-2105 (two-year suit limitation from inception of loss) and 14 VAC 5-400-50 (15-day claim acknowledgement and reply to communications) (2026-07-18)
Buying or selling: what must be disclosed
Virginia is a "buyer beware" (caveat emptor) state for home sales, not a full-disclosure state. By law the seller furnishes the buyer a Residential Property Disclosure Statement providing that the owner "makes no representations or warranties as to the condition of the real property or any improvements thereon"—including the roof—and advising the buyer to beware of matters that may affect the purchase. The burden is on the buyer to exercise whatever due diligence they deem necessary, including obtaining a home inspection, before settlement; a seller generally has no duty to volunteer known roof defects (though they cannot actively misrepresent or conceal a defect).
Source: Va. Code § 55.1-703 (Virginia Residential Property Disclosure Act) (2026-07-18)
What homeowners pay here
Homeowners in Virginia pay an average of about $1,332 per year for a standard HO-3 homeowners insurance policy, based on the most recent nationwide comparison (2022 data). Virginia's average sits below the national average of $1,569, reflecting its relatively lower catastrophe exposure. Your own premium will vary with home value, roof age and condition, coverage limits, deductible, and claims history, so use this figure as a benchmark rather than a quote.
Source: Insurance Information Institute (III), citing NAIC "Average Premiums for Homeowners and Renters Insurance by State, 2022" (HO-3 owner-occupied policy) (2022-12-31)
When the insurer won't move: file a complaint
In Virginia, insurers are regulated by the Bureau of Insurance, part of the State Corporation Commission (SCC). A homeowner who believes a claim was wrongly denied, delayed, underpaid, or mishandled can file a complaint against the insurer online through the SCC's Insurance Complaint Portal, or by mail, fax, or hand delivery to the Bureau at 1300 East Main Street, Richmond, VA; the Bureau does not accept complaints by phone or email. Once submitted, the complaint is assigned to an insurance examiner, who reviews the company's response to confirm it followed Virginia insurance laws and the policy terms. For property and casualty questions, the Bureau can be reached at 804-371-9185 or toll-free at 1-877-310-6560.
Source: Virginia State Corporation Commission — Bureau of Insurance (File an Insurance Complaint) (2026-07-18)
Roofers in Crewe
Rated roofing contractors serving Crewe, drawn from Google. The notes under each are quotes from real reviews — vet any contractor yourself before signing.
roofing contractor
★★★★★5.0 · 4 reviews- Prompt, courteous, clean. “They were prompt, courteous, very clean/neat, Reasonably priced.” — L C, 6 years ago
- Explains problems clearly. “Explained problems as encountered.” — L C, 6 years ago
- Treats homes carefully. “I really felt like they treated my old home as their own.” — L C, 6 years ago
Rating and reviews via Google. Every point above quotes an actual review — not our opinion of the business.
Lifetime Building Supply
★★★★★4.7 · 275 reviews- Skilled craftsmanship. “Each process was done by individuals who pride themselves in their particular craftsmanship.” — Margaret Taylor, a year ago
- Kind and responsive. “This company was extremely kind, fast with responses, helped us with financing, and had the work done in one week.” — Melissa Dickerson, 2 years ago
- Thorough cleanup. “The crew who did our roof were all very friendly, and cleaned up every single scrap and piece of trash on the ground after they complete the work.” — Melissa Dickerson, 2 years ago
- Unresolved installation issues. “3 months later they have not addressed the issue although everyone we speak to at the company agrees the work is not acceptable.” — Debbie Ott, 7 months ago
- Significant scheduling delays. “But it took so long for installation. Gave down payment in early November. Wasn't installed until 2nd week of January.” — Marvin Vaughters, 5 months ago
Rating and reviews via Google. Every point above quotes an actual review — not our opinion of the business.
Public adjusters in Crewe
Licensed public adjusters represent you, not the insurer, for a fee. Virginia's rules on that fee are above. Reviews via Google.
Hughes & Associates Public Adjusters
★★★★★4.9 · 18 reviews- Relentless follow-through. “Rob and his team spent countless hours inventorying our items after a fire loss claim. They relentlessly followed through with the insurance company over the course of 2 years” — Joel Wolters, 3 months ago
- Held insurance accountable. “Rob was there to hold the insurance company accountable for damages to my home.” — Amadea, 4 years ago
Rating and reviews via Google. Every point above quotes an actual review — not our opinion of the business.
Old Dominion Public Adjusters
★★★★★5.0 · 48 reviews- Comprehensive claim handling. “Jason took over ALL the insurance issues while we recovered.” — Peter A George, 5 months ago
- Thorough and compassionate. “Jason called me back right away. He was clear, compassionate, and incredibly thorough.” — Tiffany Collins, 10 months ago
- Fights for client rights. “Extremely kind, understanding, knowledgeable and not afraid to fight for his clients rights” — Trina Johnson, 5 months ago
Rating and reviews via Google. Every point above quotes an actual review — not our opinion of the business.
Goodman-Gable-Gould, Adjusters International - Public Adjuster
★★★★★5.0 · 18 reviews- Tenacious settlement negotiation. “Without their tenacity and experience in such matters we likely would have never gotten a settlement that came close to making us whole” — Allen Cumbia, a year ago
- Attentive and helpful staff. “Deanna and Andy were especially attentive and helpful. They truly exceeded all of my expectations.” — Bridget Hengle, a year ago
- Persistent case management. “They stayed with my case until we got a good outcome.” — Grace Hadeed, a year ago
Rating and reviews via Google. Every point above quotes an actual review — not our opinion of the business.
Allclaims Pro - Public Adjusters
★★★★★4.9 · 207 reviews- Ensured coverage completeness. “ACP followed up several times ensuring the full scope and cost for the new roof was covered.” — Christian Eihausen, a month ago
- Wouldn't use again. “Though All Claims did a good job I would not use them again” — Michael, a month ago
Rating and reviews via Google. Every point above quotes an actual review — not our opinion of the business.
Fairfax Public Adjusters
★★★★★5.0 · 4 reviews- Incredible detail orientation. “the team over there are incredible and detail oriented.” — Xact Account, 3 months ago
- Answered all questions. “Christian was great and answered all my questions as this was my first experience with having a roof replaced.” — Barbara Allen, in the last week
- Highly knowledgeable staff. “Christian immediately made me feel like I was in good hands and was incredibly knowledgeable.” — Yasmine Mollings, 2 weeks ago
Rating and reviews via Google. Every point above quotes an actual review — not our opinion of the business.