Example: Engineer report says roof damage is not storm related
A denial letter relies on an engineer report that attributes roof conditions to age, installation, maintenance, or non-storm causes.
Insurance Company Position
The insurer relies on inspection findings or an engineer report to dispute storm causation.
Scenario summary
A denial letter relies on an engineer report that attributes roof conditions to age, installation, maintenance, or non-storm causes.
Documents That May Matter
- Denial or payment letter
- Policy, declarations, and relevant pages
- Carrier estimate or inspection report
- Contractor estimate
- Photos of the damage
- Claim communications and notes
Questions a Reviewer May Ask
- What date did the loss happen and when was it reported?
- What exact policy language or exclusion did the carrier cite?
- Are there photos, estimates, reports, or communications that show the timeline?
- Did the insurer request more documents or mention a deadline?
Mistakes to Avoid
- Do not ignore deadline language in letters.
- Do not rely on memory when documents are available.
- Do not post claim numbers, policy numbers, addresses, or documents publicly.
- Do not assume a denial automatically means bad faith.
Not legal advice. Uploaded documents stay private. A lawyer or team member must review facts and documents before legal advice is provided.
FAQs
Can this discussion tell me whether I have a claim?
No. This page is general educational information. A lawyer or team member must review the facts and documents before legal advice is provided.
What is the safest first document to upload?
A denial letter, payment letter, carrier estimate, contractor estimate, policy excerpt, or clear damage photo is often useful for preliminary review.
