What to do After the Insurance Adjuster Visits Your Roof | McAllen & RGV

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McAllen & RGV roofing help after the insurance visit

After the Insurance Adjuster Visits: Understanding Your Roofing Scope

After your insurance adjuster visits, you may receive an estimate with roofing line items, materials, measurements, and depreciation information. Marva Roofing can help you understand the roofing terminology, inspect the roof condition, and provide a contractor estimate for the work we perform. We do not interpret your policy, negotiate settlement amounts, or represent you in claim discussions.

  • Understand the estimate
  • Review roof condition
  • Photo documentation
  • Repair or replacement guidance
  • No deductible games
What happens now?

You do not have to figure out the roof paperwork alone

The estimate may include roofing words you do not use every day: underlayment, drip edge, flashing, ridge cap, pipe boots, ventilation, decking, depreciation, and deductible.

We help you understand the roofing side of the paperwork and compare it to the real condition of your roof.

  • We inspect the roof and take clear photos.
  • We explain the roofing parts in plain language.
  • We prepare a contractor estimate for our work.
  • We help you decide whether repair or replacement makes sense.

Marva Roofing is a roofing contractor, not a public adjuster. Your insurance company, agent, licensed public adjuster, or attorney handles coverage and claim questions.

A calm next step

Bring us the estimate, and we will explain the roofing side

We are not here to argue with your insurance company. We are here to help you understand what the roof needs, what the paperwork says about the roof, and what your repair or replacement options look like.

Start here

If the adjuster already came, this page is for you

You may have a packet, email, app notification, claim summary, payment note, or roof estimate from your insurance company. You may also have a check that looks smaller than expected, a list of roofing items you do not understand, or questions about whether the work listed matches the roof.

That is normal. Roof estimates can be hard to read. The important thing is to slow down, protect the home from more damage, keep your records together, and get a clear roofing review before work begins.

If you have not filed yet, start with Before You File a Roof Insurance Claim in Texas. If you mainly need help gathering photos, use How to Document Storm Roof Damage in the RGV.

The first 24 to 72 hours after the visit

Do these things before you approve roof work

1

Save every document

Keep the estimate, claim summary, photos, emails, payment notes, deductible information, and any message from the insurance company in one folder.

2

Read the roof section slowly

Look for what roofing materials, roof areas, and repair items are listed. Do not worry if some words are unfamiliar. We can help explain the roofing terms.

3

Check your deductible

Your deductible is your part of the project cost. Marva Roofing does not waive, rebate, absorb, hide, or cover deductibles.

4

Protect the home if needed

If water can still get in, temporary protection may be needed. Take photos before and after temporary work, and save all receipts.

5

Schedule a roof review

A documented inspection helps compare the estimate to visible roof conditions and the work needed to repair or replace the roof correctly.

6

Ask coverage questions to the right people

Questions about what your policy covers should go to your insurance company, agent, licensed public adjuster, or attorney.

Simple rule: Marva Roofing can explain the roof. Your insurance company explains the claim decision and coverage.

What you may receive

The insurance paperwork may include several different things

A roof estimate

This may list materials, measurements, quantities, labor, and cleanup. It may be broken down by roof section or by type of work.

A claim summary

This may show the claimed damage, the amount estimated for repair or replacement, your deductible, and payment information.

Photos or inspection notes

Some insurance companies include photos. Some only send numbers and line items. Either way, your contractor should still inspect the roof.

Payment details

You may see a first payment, a held-back amount, or a note that more money may be released after work starts or finishes.

Do not panic if the paperwork is confusing. A roof estimate is not written like a normal homeowner quote. It may use short descriptions, abbreviations, and numbers that need to be matched to the actual roof.

Roofing scope review

What a roofing scope review means

A roofing scope review is a contractor review of the roofing work listed in the estimate compared with the visible condition of your roof. It is not claim adjusting. It is not legal advice. It is not a promise that your insurance company will change anything.

It is simply a careful roofing review so you understand what the roof appears to need and what our company would include in the work we perform.

If the estimate says one thing and the roof condition appears to show something else, we can provide photos, measurements, notes, and a contractor estimate. You decide what to do with that information.

What we look at

  • Roof slopes and affected areas
  • Shingles, tiles, metal panels, or flat roof materials
  • Roof edges, valleys, ridges, and transitions
  • Flashing, vents, pipe boots, and roof penetrations
  • Leak locations and visible water entry clues
  • Repair possibility versus replacement need

Keeping it clean in Texas

What Marva Roofing can and cannot do after the adjuster visit

We can help with roofing facts

  • Inspect your roof after the adjuster visit.
  • Take photos of visible roof conditions.
  • Explain roofing terms in plain language.
  • Prepare a contractor estimate for the work we perform.
  • Explain repair and replacement options.
  • Answer technical roofing questions about our inspection findings.
  • Provide invoices, receipts, and project documents after work is done.

We cannot act as your claim representative

  • We do not file claims for homeowners.
  • We do not negotiate claim settlements.
  • We do not interpret policy coverage.
  • We do not speak for you on coverage issues.
  • We do not promise claim outcomes.
  • We do not tell your carrier what it owes.
  • We do not waive, rebate, absorb, hide, or cover deductibles.
Important Texas insurance notice: Marva Roofing is a roofing contractor, not a public insurance adjuster. We provide roof inspections, photos, contractor estimates, and roofing guidance. Coverage decisions and claim payments are handled by your insurance company or other licensed professionals.

Bring these items

What to have ready for a roofing scope review

Insurance estimate

Bring the roof estimate or claim packet your insurance company sent. A PDF, printed copy, or clear screenshots can help.

Claim summary

If you have a summary page showing the deductible, first payment, held-back amount, or roof notes, keep that with your paperwork.

Photos and videos

Bring your own photos from before the adjuster visit, during the storm cleanup, and after any temporary protection was installed.

Receipts

Save receipts for tarping, emergency repairs, cleanup, drying equipment, materials, or other storm-related expenses.

Storm notes

Write down the storm date, the day you first noticed damage, rooms affected by leaks, and any calls or emails with your insurance company.

Deductible details

Have your regular deductible and wind/hail deductible information ready, especially if your policy uses a percentage deductible.

Need the full checklist? Visit How to Document Storm Roof Damage in the RGV and use the RGV Storm Roof Documentation Checklist.

Plain-English estimate help

Roofing words you may see after the adjuster visit

You should not have to be a roofer to understand your paperwork. These are common roof items that may appear on an insurance estimate or contractor estimate.

Roofing word What it means in plain language Why it matters on an RGV roof
Shingles, tiles, panels, or flat roof material The main outer layer that takes the sun, rain, hail, and wind. South Texas heat and storm cycles can expose weak spots fast.
Underlayment The protective layer under the visible roof covering. It helps protect the home if wind-driven rain gets under the top roof layer.
Flashing Metal that helps seal walls, chimneys, valleys, and roof transitions. Leaks often start where the roof meets a wall, vent, or change in direction.
Drip edge Metal at the roof edge that helps direct water away from the roof edge. Edges are vulnerable in high wind and heavy rain.
Starter shingles The first shingle layer installed along the lower edges of a shingle roof. Helps protect the edge where wind can lift shingles.
Ridge cap The finished material covering the peak or ridge of the roof. Ridges take sun, wind, and storm exposure from multiple directions.
Pipe boots Rubber or metal seals around plumbing pipes that come through the roof. Cracked boots are a common leak source after heat and storms.
Ventilation Roof vents that help heat and moisture leave the attic. RGV heat makes good ventilation especially important for roof life and attic comfort.
Decking The wood surface under the roofing materials. Hidden soft or rotted decking may show up once roof materials are removed.
Detach and reset Removing and reinstalling items so roof work can be done correctly. This may apply to satellite mounts, vents, or other roof-mounted items.
Important: This table explains roofing words. It does not explain whether your policy covers an item. For coverage questions, contact your insurance company, agent, licensed public adjuster, or attorney.

Deductible and payment notes

Why the first payment may not match the total estimate

Your deductible comes out of the project

Your deductible is your part of the covered loss. Texas law does not allow contractors to waive, rebate, absorb, or help you avoid paying your deductible.

If another contractor says they can “take care of it,” treat that as a warning sign.

Some payments are made in stages

Some policies pay a first amount and release more after repairs begin or after the project is completed and final documents are submitted.

That is one reason the first check may be smaller than the estimate total.

Estimated roofing work − deductible − any held-back amount = possible first payment

Example

If the roof estimate is $15,000, your deductible is $3,000, and the paperwork shows $2,500 held back until work is completed, the first payment might be around $9,500.

What to ask your insurance company

  • What is my deductible for this claim?
  • Is my wind/hail deductible different?
  • Is any amount being held back until work is completed?
  • What documents are needed after the roof work is done?
Keep proof of deductible payment. Save canceled checks, credit card statements, money order receipts, payment-plan documents, invoices, and final receipts.

Protect your home

If the roof can still leak, do not wait

After the adjuster visit, your roof may still need temporary protection before permanent repairs are completed. If rain can get in, water can damage drywall, insulation, ceilings, flooring, electrical areas, and personal belongings.

Take photos before temporary work

Photograph the leak area, roof damage if safely visible, ceiling stains, attic moisture, and any items damaged by water.

Use temporary protection when needed

Tarping, emergency sealing, or temporary leak control can help reduce more damage while the project is being planned.

Save receipts

Keep receipts for emergency repairs, tarping, cleanup, materials, drying equipment, and any storm-related work.

Do not make permanent changes too early

Talk to your insurance company before permanent repairs if you are unsure what documents they need.

For urgent leaks, visit Emergency Roof Repair in McAllen or Roof Leak Repair in McAllen.

McAllen and South Texas roof details

RGV roofs need a careful second look after storms

McAllen and the Rio Grande Valley put roofs through a rough mix of heat, UV exposure, wind-driven rain, hail, tropical weather, and sudden downpours. After an adjuster visit, a roofing review should not only look for the obvious damage. It should also look at the details that keep water out during the next storm.

Edges and eaves

Wind can lift or loosen roof edges. We check the lower edges, rakes, drip edge, starter areas, and fascia connection points.

Valleys and roof transitions

Heavy rain collects in valleys and roof changes. Small issues here can become interior leaks fast.

Pipe boots and vents

South Texas heat can crack rubber seals. Storm movement can also loosen roof penetrations.

Tile, metal, shingle, and flat roof differences

Every roof type shows storm damage differently. A tile crack, a lifted shingle, a loose metal fastener, and a flat roof seam issue are not reviewed the same way.

For material-specific guidance, visit storm damage on asphalt shingles, tile roof inspections, or hail damage on metal roofs.

McAllen & RGV Roof Insurance Education Center

Follow the full homeowner path

This page is one step in Marva Roofing’s insurance-aware roofing education path. Use these pages in order, or jump to the one that matches your situation today.

1

Before You File a Roof Insurance Claim in Texas

Start here if you have not filed yet and want a documented roof inspection before deciding what to do.

2

How to Document Storm Roof Damage in the RGV

Use this checklist for photos, receipts, storm notes, and temporary repair records.

3

Texas Roof Deductible Law

Understand why your deductible must be paid and why deductible-waiver offers are a red flag.

4

After the Insurance Adjuster Visits Your Roof

You are here. Learn what the estimate means and what to do next.

5

Roof Scope Review in McAllen

Compare roofing line items with visible roof condition and a contractor estimate for Marva’s work.

6

Repair or Replace a Storm-Damaged Roof in South Texas

Decide whether a repair, replacement, or monitoring plan makes the most sense.

7

Using a Tax Refund for Roof Repairs in McAllen

Plan your roof budget, deductible reserve, repair cost, or material upgrade without treating it as tax advice.

Hub

McAllen & RGV Roof Insurance Education Center

Return to the main insurance help hub for the complete homeowner path.

Need someone to explain the roof estimate?

Request a roofing scope review before work begins

We will inspect the roof, review the roofing line items, explain what the roof appears to need, and provide a contractor estimate for the work we perform.

Areas we serve

Roofing scope review help for McAllen and the Rio Grande Valley

Marva Roofing helps homeowners after adjuster visits in McAllen and nearby RGV communities, including Mission, Edinburg, Pharr, San Juan, Alamo, Donna, Weslaco, Mercedes, Harlingen, Brownsville, and surrounding South Texas neighborhoods.

For the full list of areas, visit Marva Roofing Service Areas.

Frequently asked questions

Questions homeowners ask after the adjuster visits

What should I do after the insurance adjuster visits my roof?

Save the estimate, claim summary, photos, payment notes, and deductible information. Then schedule a roofing scope review so a roofer can inspect the roof, explain the roofing line items, and provide a contractor estimate for the work needed.

Can Marva Roofing review my insurance estimate?

Yes, we can review the roofing line items, inspect the roof, take photos, and explain the roofing work in plain language. We can also provide our contractor estimate for the work we perform. We do not interpret policy coverage or negotiate claim payments.

Does Marva Roofing negotiate with my insurance company?

No. Marva Roofing does not negotiate claim settlements, file claims for homeowners, represent homeowners to insurance companies, or speak for homeowners on coverage issues. We provide roofing facts, photos, contractor estimates, and repair or replacement guidance.

What should I bring to a roofing scope review?

Bring the insurance estimate, claim summary, deductible information, photos, videos, receipts for temporary repairs, storm notes, and any emails or messages from the insurance company.

Why did I only receive part of the money first?

Some policies pay in stages. Your first payment may subtract your deductible and may also hold back part of the amount until the work starts or finishes. Ask your insurance company what documents are needed for any remaining payment.

Do I have to pay my deductible?

Yes. Your deductible is part of your policy and must be paid by the policyholder. Marva Roofing does not waive, rebate, absorb, hide, or cover deductibles.

Can Marva Roofing meet an adjuster if another visit is scheduled?

We can be available to answer technical roofing questions about our inspection findings and our contractor estimate. We cannot represent you, discuss policy coverage on your behalf, negotiate settlement amounts, or promise claim results.

What if the estimate does not seem to match the roof condition?

We can inspect the roof and provide photos, notes, measurements, and a contractor estimate for the work we believe is needed. You can choose whether to share that information with your insurance company, agent, licensed public adjuster, or attorney.

Your next step

Request a Roofing Scope Review

If the adjuster already visited and you are staring at an estimate you do not fully understand, Marva Roofing can help you make sense of the roofing side. We will inspect the roof, review the line items, explain what we see, and provide a clear contractor estimate for the work we perform.

Marva Roofing | info@marvaroofing.com | Serving McAllen, Mission, Edinburg, Pharr, Weslaco, Harlingen, Brownsville and the Rio Grande Valley.