"Real Help. Real People. Every Step of the Way."
About Us
About Storm Advocate
Severe weather can create uncertainty, confusion, and stress—especially when property owners are trying to understand damage, documentation, and insurance processes. Storm Advocate exists to help individuals better understand available information and common next steps, so they can make informed decisions for their situation.
Our Purpose
Storm Advocate provides general informational support designed to help property owners:
- Better understand common storm-related issues
- Learn about typical insurance claim processes
- Organize information and documentation
- Access educational resources related to recovery timelines
Our Approach
How We Operate
Storm Advocate operates with a focus on:
Clear, straightforward communication
Education over outcomes
Transparency and independence
Respect for individual circumstances
Transparency
What Storm Advocate Is Not
- Is not an insurance company
- Is not a law firm
- Is not a public adjusting firm
- Does not negotiate or settle claims
- Does not guarantee results or outcomes
Property owners are encouraged to consult licensed professionals for advice or services specific to their situation.
Independence & Integrity
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The Experience Behind This Guidance —
and How We Keep It Accurate
Insurance claim guidance is only as useful as the experience behind it. StormAdvocate was built on direct, first-hand exposure to storm claim intake operations — the actual intake conversations, documentation reviews, adjuster coordination, and dispute cycles that play out after every major weather event. That operational background is what separates this content from generic insurance explainers. The guidance here reflects what actually derails real claims, not what policy language says should happen in ideal conditions.
What "Independent" Actually Means for You
When we say documentation gaps are the leading cause of underpaid claims, that's based on pattern recognition across thousands of claim files — not on steering you toward a paid service. When we point you toward an attorney, it's because your specific situation has signals that warrant legal review, not because an attorney paid for placement. That independence is the foundation of the site's value.
Storm Types This Site Covers
StormAdvocate covers the full range of severe weather events that generate residential insurance claims in the United States.
Hail damage claims — the most commonly disputed storm claim type — are covered in depth, including documentation of granule loss, dent patterns on soft metals, cosmetic versus functional damage arguments, and RCV versus ACV settlement disputes. Wind damage claims are covered with specific attention to uplift damage, fastener pull-through, and the "pre-existing wear" argument insurers use to reduce scope. Hurricane and tropical storm claims are covered for coastal and near-coastal states, including separate hurricane deductible structures, storm surge versus wind damage distinctions, and the specific regulatory frameworks that apply in high-frequency states like Florida, Louisiana, and Texas.
How Content Is Reviewed and Updated
Every guide on this site is reviewed against current state statutes before publication. When insurance regulations change — and they change frequently, particularly in high-litigation states — affected pages are updated. Source citations in each article point to official government sources, NAIC data, and published insurance industry research rather than to secondary aggregators. If a cited statute or data point is superseded, we update the citation. The goal is that any piece of information on this site can be verified by a licensed professional in under five minutes.
What You Can Rely on This Site For — and What You Cannot
You can rely on this site for
- Accurate, state-specific claim timelines and deadlines
- Plain-language explanations of policy provisions — appraisal clauses, proof of loss, depreciation holdbacks
- Documentation protocols aligned with what adjusters and attorneys actually review
- Direct connections to licensed professionals when your situation warrants one
You cannot rely on this site for
- Legal advice specific to your claim
- A determination of whether your claim will succeed
- Negotiation with your insurer on your behalf
- Any promise of outcome — those require a licensed professional
Frequently Asked Questions
Who writes the content on this site?
Content is developed from direct operational experience in storm claim intake and reviewed against current state insurance statutes and published regulatory guidance.
Is the information specific to my state?
Yes. State-specific pages are written against the statutes, deadlines, and regulatory frameworks of each individual state. National content is clearly labeled as general guidance.
Does using this site create any legal or financial obligation?
No. All content is free and informational. If you submit a contact form and are connected with an attorney, any engagement with that attorney is separate from StormAdvocate and entirely at your discretion.
How current is the information?
We review and update content on a rolling basis, prioritizing states with recent legislative changes affecting claim timelines, bad faith remedies, and documentation requirements.