WILDWOOD, MO · LOCAL SERVICE

Storm Damage Repair in Wildwood, MO

Revolve Construction serves Wildwood and St. Louis County, MO with storm damage repair31 miles from our South County headquarters. 1990s-2010s executive homes on large wooded lots plus equestrian and acreage properties.

Free Inspection(314) 400-8006

Wildwood Quick Facts

Population

35,417

County

St. Louis County, MO

Distance from HQ

~31 driving miles

Permit Authority

City of Wildwood Planning Department (permits via St. Louis County)

Typical Permit Fee

$150-$250 (St. Louis County schedule)

Primary ZIP Codes

63040, 63038, 63025

ZIP Prefix

630

Why Wildwood Homeowners Choose Revolve for Storm Damage Repair

West County's largest-area municipality, incorporated in 1995 to preserve a semi-rural character; two-thirds of the city is parkland, greenbelt, or low-density acreage around the historic communities of Grover, Pond, and Glencoe. For homeowners and property owners throughout neighborhoods like Town Center, Grover, Pond, storm damage repair is one of the most consequential exterior decisions you will make — and the choice of contractor matters as much as the product.

1990s-2010s executive homes on large wooded lots plus equestrian and acreage properties; complex multi-gable roofs, cedar-to-architectural conversions, and premium synthetic slate are common, and tree exposure drives steady storm-repair demand. After any hail or wind event in the St. Louis metro, every exterior surface takes exposure — not just the roof. Revolve inspects and documents the full scope, from ridge cap to gutters, so nothing is left off the insurance claim.

Revolve Construction has operated in the St. Louis metro since 2008, completing 6,000+ projects across St. Louis County, MO and surrounding areas. We are 31 miles from our South County headquarters — local enough to respond same-day. Permits are handled through the City of Wildwood Planning Department (permits via St. Louis County) — typical residential fees run $150-$250 (St. Louis County schedule). Revolve pulls and manages permits as part of every project scope.

Neighborhoods We Serve in Wildwood

Town CenterGroverPondGlencoeBabler Forest areaCherry Hills

Local Context

Wildwood Roofing at a Glance

Permit & Code

City of Wildwood Planning Department (permits via St. Louis County)

Approx. residential roof permit fee: $150-$250 (St. Louis County schedule)

Revolve handles permits for every job in Wildwood.

Storm Activity

Recent severe weather in the 630 ZIP corridor (St. Louis City / South County):

  • April 2, 2024 Hail, 1.00 in (quarter-sized)
  • June 16, 2023 Wind, 75 mph
  • April 29, 2022 Hail, 1.75 in (golf ball)

Events sourced from NOAA SPC archive — verify with official records before relying on for claims. Data is illustrative placeholder only.

Local Housing Stock

1990s-2010s executive homes on large wooded lots plus equestrian and acreage properties; complex multi-gable roofs, cedar-to-architectural conversions, and premium synthetic slate are common, and tree exposure drives steady storm-repair demand.

Town CenterGroverPondGlencoeBabler Forest areaCherry Hills

About Wildwood

Wildwood is a community of approximately 35,417 residents in St. Louis County, MO, located roughly 31driving miles from Revolve Construction’s South County headquarters. West County's largest-area municipality, incorporated in 1995 to preserve a semi-rural character; two-thirds of the city is parkland, greenbelt, or low-density acreage around the historic communities of Grover, Pond, and Glencoe.

Revolve Construction has served Wildwood homeowners and property managers for 17 years, with more than 6,000+ roofing, siding, and storm restoration projects completed across the St. Louis metro. Our crews are certified by GAF Certified, Owens Corning Preferred Contractor, CertainTeed Select ShingleMaster — so every job in Wildwood meets manufacturer warranty requirements and current MO building code.

Hail vs. Wind Damage: How to Tell the Difference

Hail damage and wind damage produce different visual signatures on a roof. Knowing the difference matters because accurate documentation speeds the claims process and ensures nothing is missed.

Hail damage signs: Granule loss in concentrated circular or oval patterns — each impact site creates a distinct granule-cleared area surrounded by undamaged shingles. Exposed mat at random, distributed points across the slope rather than in linear patterns. Soft spots when pressed lightly with a finger — a bruised shingle has lost its structural integrity beneath the surface. Visible fracture lines radiating from an impact point on brittle material. Dings or dents on metal accessories: gutters, downspouts, drip edge, flashings, and HVAC equipment. Dented metal accessories confirm a hail event and help establish hail size for the claim.

Wind damage signs: Lifted or missing shingles in linear patterns along a slope — wind damage is directional and tends to follow consistent lines rather than random distribution. Blown-off ridge cap shingles are a primary wind indicator. Sealing failures where the adhesive strip between shingles has broken, allowing shingles to lift without fully departing the roof. Debris impact damage from branch strikes and projectile impacts, which leave localized damage distinct from hail patterns. In significant wind events, fascia boards detached, soffit panels blown out, and satellite dish or vent cap damage are supporting evidence.

Documenting both damage types in a single inspection is important because most St. Louis storm events deliver both hail and wind simultaneously. A thorough inspection captures all damage in one documented scope rather than requiring multiple claim supplements.

Insurance Claim Fraud Red Flags

Every major St. Louis storm event is followed by contractors — some legitimate, many not. Six red flags to watch for before you sign anything:

A contractor offers to waive your deductible. This is insurance fraud. The deductible is your contractual obligation to your insurer. A contractor who inflates the scope to absorb your deductible is submitting a fraudulent claim, and participating homeowners can face liability under Missouri law.

Full payment demanded before work starts. A standard deposit of 20 to 33 percent for material procurement is reasonable. Demanding 50 percent or more upfront — especially from a contractor who appeared after the storm — is a common pattern in storm-chaser fraud.

A 'free roof' pitch. Insurance pays the covered scope minus your deductible. Your deductible is real money. Any contractor who characterizes an insurance-funded replacement as free is misrepresenting the transaction.

Pressure to sign an Assignment of Benefits immediately. An AOB transfers your insurance claim rights to the contractor. This document should be read carefully and understood before signing — not rushed through as a first-step formality.

Same-day high-pressure closes. A roofing project deserves at least 24 hours of consideration, reference checking, and COI verification. Any contractor who insists you must sign today is using tactics designed to bypass due diligence.

No license or insurance documentation available on request. A Certificate of Insurance should be producible immediately. A contractor who needs several days to locate their insurance documents likely does not have them.

What Revolve would never do: We will never offer to waive your deductible. We will never demand full payment before work starts. We will never describe an insurance-funded replacement as free. We will never pressure-close on the day of inspection. We document damage with photos before recommending replacement. We provide our COI to any customer who asks, immediately.

Insurance Glossary: 13 Terms St. Louis Homeowners Should Know

ACV (Actual Cash Value): The depreciated value of your damaged property at the time of loss. An ACV settlement pays what the damaged material was worth today — not what it costs to replace it. Older roofs receive significantly less than replacement cost under ACV policies.

RCV (Replacement Cost Value): The cost to replace damaged property with a new equivalent, without depreciation deducted. RCV is the more favorable policy type for homeowners — it pays the full replacement cost minus your deductible once repairs are complete.

Depreciation: The reduction in value of property due to age and wear. Under an ACV policy, depreciation is deducted from the settlement and is not recoverable. Under an RCV policy, depreciation is initially withheld as recoverable depreciation and released after the repair is completed.

Recoverable Depreciation: The portion of an RCV settlement withheld until repairs are completed. After your contractor submits a final invoice and completion documentation, you can request the withheld depreciation from your insurer. This is a step many homeowners miss, leaving money on the table.

Deductible: The amount you pay out of pocket before your insurance coverage applies. Your deductible is your responsibility and cannot legally be waived or absorbed by a contractor. Common residential deductibles in St. Louis range from $500 to $5,000; hail and wind percentage deductibles based on the home's insured value are increasingly common.

Supplement: A request submitted to the insurer after the initial settlement to add items that were missed in the original scope — additional damaged materials, code-required upgrades, or price adjustments for material cost changes. Supplements are a normal part of the claims process. Revolve prepares and submits supplements with full documentation when the initial scope is incomplete.

Scope of Loss: The insurance adjuster's written documentation of covered damage and the cost to repair or replace it. This document defines what the insurer will pay. Review it carefully before signing — every line item matters.

AOB (Assignment of Benefits): A legal document that transfers your right to receive insurance claim payments and negotiate with the insurer to the contractor. Read any AOB carefully before signing; understand exactly what rights you are transferring.

Code Upgrade (Ordinance or Law Coverage): Many older homes require code upgrades during repair — updated ventilation, underlayment standards, or decking requirements — that the base insurance scope does not cover. Ordinance or Law coverage pays for these required upgrades. Not all policies include it; check yours.

Matching Statute: Some states require insurers to replace all matching components if the damaged portion cannot be matched, to ensure consistent appearance. Missouri has relatively limited matching requirements; Illinois has stronger protections. The state where your property is located determines which law applies.

Public Adjuster: A licensed professional who works exclusively for the policyholder to document damage and negotiate the claim settlement. Public adjusters typically charge 10 to 15 percent of the claim settlement as their fee. In most roofing claims, a contractor who attends the adjuster meeting with documentation provides equivalent advocacy without the fee.

Insurance Adjuster: An employee or contractor of the insurance company who inspects the damage and writes the scope of loss. The adjuster's primary obligation is to the insurer. Independent documentation by your contractor is valuable context for every adjuster meeting.

Claim Specialist (Revolve's role): Revolve functions as the contractor and claim documentation partner on storm damage projects. We inspect and document the full exterior, produce a photo-documented condition report, attend the adjuster visit, and file supplements when the initial scope is incomplete. We do not act as a public adjuster, but we provide comprehensive contractor-side support throughout the claims process.

Frequently Asked Questions: Storm Damage Repair in Wildwood

Should I file an insurance claim for hail damage to my roof?+

It depends on the extent of damage relative to your deductible and how the claim will affect your premium. Revolve provides a free inspection and honest assessment. We will tell you if the documented damage is likely to result in a covered claim — and we will tell you when it is not worth filing.

How long do I have to file a storm damage insurance claim in Missouri?+

Missouri does not set a statutory maximum, but most homeowners policies have contractual claim-filing timelines — typically one to two years from the date of loss. However, waiting longer than necessary gives the insurer grounds to argue the damage is from deferred maintenance rather than storm. File promptly after a confirmed storm event.

Can I choose my own contractor for an insurance-covered roof replacement?+

Yes. In Missouri, you have the right to choose your own contractor for covered repairs. The insurance company can specify what the repair scope and cost should be, but they cannot require you to use a preferred contractor.

What is a public adjuster and do I need one?+

A public adjuster works on behalf of the homeowner (for a fee, typically 10–15% of the claim) to document and negotiate the settlement. In most cases, an experienced roofing contractor who meets the adjuster on-site produces equivalent results without the fee. Revolve meets adjusters on every claim we are involved with.

My adjuster says the damage is below my deductible. What should I do?+

Get a second opinion from an independent contractor. If our inspection documents additional damage that was missed, we prepare a supplement with supporting photos and measurements. Adjuster assessments vary in thoroughness — a well-documented supplement regularly results in a revised scope.

Does Revolve handle the insurance claim paperwork?+

We help with documentation, inspection reports, supplement filings, and adjuster meetings. We do not act as a public adjuster (that requires a separate license), but we provide all the contractor-side documentation the claim process requires.

What should I do in the first 48 hours after a storm?+

Document everything with date-stamped photos before anything is touched. Mitigate active water intrusion immediately — Revolve offers 24/7 emergency tarping. Save all mitigation receipts. File your claim with your insurer promptly, and schedule a professional inspection before the adjuster visits so you have independent documentation of the full damage scope.

How can I tell if I have hail damage vs. wind damage?+

Hail damage produces concentrated circular granule-loss patterns, random soft spots across the slope, and dents on metal accessories. Wind damage produces linear patterns of lifted or missing shingles, blown ridge caps, and directional debris impacts. Most St. Louis storms produce both. Revolve documents and distinguishes both types in a single inspection report.

What is recoverable depreciation and how do I get it?+

On RCV (Replacement Cost Value) policies, the insurer withholds a portion of the settlement — the depreciation — until repairs are completed. After your contractor submits a final invoice and proof of completion, you submit a request to your insurer to release the withheld depreciation. Many homeowners miss this step. Revolve walks clients through the depreciation release process on every RCV project.

Do I need a permit for storm damage repair in Wildwood?+

In most cases, yes — roof replacements and major exterior work in Wildwood are permitted through the City of Wildwood Planning Department (permits via St. Louis County), with typical residential fees running $150-$250 (St. Louis County schedule). You don't need to handle any of it yourself: Revolve pulls the permit, includes the fee in your written scope, and schedules the required inspections as part of every Wildwood project.

How quickly can Revolve respond to a Wildwood service call?+

Wildwood is roughly 31 driving miles from our South County headquarters at 7601 River Walk Ct, so our crews are in the area regularly. Active leaks and storm emergencies get same-day response — we carry tarping materials on every truck — and standard inspections in Wildwood are typically scheduled within one to two business days of your call.

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