Wind-driven Rain Vs. Flood โ the Distinction That Determines Coverage
This distinction matters because it determines which insurance policy pays. Wind-driven rain that enters through a damaged building envelope (wind broke a window, lifted shingles let rain through the roof, damaged siding admitted water laterally) is covered by standard homeowners insurance as wind/storm damage. Rising surface water that enters at ground level โ overland flooding, stream overflow, surge โ is FLOOD damage, which standard homeowners does NOT cover. That requires NFIP (National Flood Insurance Program) flood insurance.
For {{state}} properties, both can happen in the same storm. Our documentation clarifies the source of intrusion so the right policy pays the right portion. Photos of where water entered (broken roof = wind; rising at ground level = flood), measurements of high-water marks, narrative of the timeline (wind hit first vs flood arrived later) โ all become part of the cause-of-loss record.
Misclassification is one of the most common reasons {{state}} storm-damage claims get denied or under-paid. We frame the loss honestly โ neither inflating to chase coverage nor under-stating to make a claim go away โ so the carrier can settle the right portion under the right policy.