After a storm, check from the ground for missing or lifted shingles, dented gutters, and granules accumulating in your downspouts and splash blocks. Inside, look for water stains on ceilings, damp spots in the attic, and daylight visible through the roof deck. If you spot any of these signs, call a professional roofer for a full inspection before the damage gets worse.
Living in Wilmington means your roof takes a beating. Between hurricane season, nor’easters, summer thunderstorms, and the occasional hailstorm, the Cape Fear coast delivers more severe weather than most places on the East Coast. Not all storm damage is obvious — some of the most expensive problems start as subtle signs that homeowners overlook for weeks or months.
Here’s exactly what to look for after a storm hits, how to assess the severity, and when it’s time to call for professional help.
Exterior Signs of Storm Damage (What You Can See From the Ground)
Never climb on your roof after a storm. Wet, damaged roofing surfaces are a serious fall hazard, and you can identify most warning signs from the ground with a pair of binoculars.
Missing or Displaced Shingles
The most obvious sign. After high winds, look at each roof slope for:
- Bare patches where shingles have blown off entirely, exposing the dark underlayment or plywood beneath
- Shingles that are flipped up or folded back — they may still be attached but their seal has broken and they’re now vulnerable to the next wind event
- Shingles on the ground around your property or in your yard
Hurricane Florence stripped shingles from thousands of Wilmington roofs in 2018. But you don’t need a hurricane — a strong summer thunderstorm with 60-70 mph gusts can unseal and remove shingles, especially on older roofs where the adhesive has degraded.
Dented or Damaged Gutters and Downspouts
Your gutters are one of the easiest indicators of storm damage:
- Dents or dings along the gutter face suggest hail impact. If your gutters are dented, your shingles likely took the same hits.
- Gutters pulling away from the fascia indicates wind force or heavy debris impact
- Crushed or bent downspouts from debris or heavy water flow
Granule Loss in Gutters and Downspouts
Asphalt shingles are coated with ceramic granules that protect the underlying asphalt from UV damage. After a storm:
- Check your gutter outlets and splash blocks for piles of granules (they look like coarse, dark sand)
- Some granule loss is normal on new shingles, but significant accumulation after a storm indicates the shingle surface has been damaged
- Bald spots on shingles visible from the ground mean the protective granule layer is gone, and that shingle’s lifespan just dropped dramatically
Homeowners often ask us, “How much granule loss is too much?” If you can see distinct bare patches on the shingle surface, or if you’re finding handfuls of granules in your gutters after a single storm, that’s beyond normal wear and indicates impact damage.
Damaged Flashing
Flashing is the metal that seals the joints where your roof meets walls, chimneys, vents, and other penetrations. After a storm:
- Look for flashing that’s bent, lifted, or pulled away from the surface
- Check chimney flashing for gaps between the metal and the masonry
- Examine vent pipe boots for cracks or separation
Flashing failure is a leading cause of roof leaks after storms, and it’s easy to miss from the ground.
Fallen Debris and Tree Damage
After storms in Wilmington — especially in neighborhoods with mature live oaks like those in Forest Hills, Sunset Park, or along Greenville Loop Road — tree damage is a major concern:
- Branches resting on the roof may have punctured or cracked shingles even if they look like they’re just sitting there
- Scrape marks or gouges from branches dragged across the roof by wind
- Heavy limbs that fell and bounced may have left impact damage you can’t see from the ground
Even if you clear the branches, the damage beneath them may need professional assessment.
Damaged Soffit and Fascia
Wind-driven rain often attacks from below the roofline:
- Soffit panels blown open or hanging loose expose your attic to rain, pests, and further wind damage
- Fascia boards that are cracked, splintered, or pulling away indicate significant wind force
- Staining or discoloration on soffit panels suggests water is running where it shouldn’t
Interior Signs of Storm Damage
Sometimes the exterior looks fine, but the damage shows up inside. Check these areas after every significant storm:
Water Stains on Ceilings and Walls
- Brown or yellowish rings on ceilings are the classic sign of a roof leak
- Staining that appears or grows after a storm indicates active water intrusion
- Peeling or bubbling paint on upper-floor ceilings suggests moisture behind the surface
- Staining on interior walls near exterior walls can indicate wind-driven rain penetrating flashing or wall junctions
Don’t ignore small stains. A small ceiling stain after Hurricane Dorian turned into a $15,000 mold remediation for one of our customers who waited three months to address it.
Attic Inspection
If you can safely access your attic, check for:
- Daylight visible through the roof deck — any light means there’s a path for water
- Damp or wet insulation — compressed, wet insulation loses its effectiveness and can develop mold
- Water marks or staining on rafters and decking — even if dry now, staining indicates past water intrusion
- Musty or moldy smell — in Wilmington’s humidity, mold can develop within 48-72 hours of water intrusion
Doors and Windows That Stick
This one surprises homeowners, but it can indicate structural roof damage:
- If upper-floor doors or windows suddenly don’t close properly after a storm, the roof structure may have shifted
- This is more common after severe events but worth noting if you experience it
Types of Storm Damage in Coastal NC
Different storms produce different types of damage:
Wind Damage
The most common in the Wilmington area. Wind damage typically shows as:
- Shingles lifted, creased, or removed
- Ridge cap shingles blown off (the ridge is the most wind-vulnerable area)
- Edge shingles peeled back from eaves and rakes
- Whole sections of roofing lifted in severe events
Wind damage often follows a pattern — the windward side of the roof takes the worst beating, and edges and ridges are more vulnerable than field shingles.
Hail Damage
Less common in Wilmington than in Piedmont NC, but we do get hail events:
- Dents in shingles with granule displacement at the impact point
- Soft spots where the shingle mat has been fractured beneath the surface
- Random pattern across the roof — hail doesn’t follow directional patterns like wind
- Damage to soft metals — check aluminum gutters, vent covers, and HVAC units for dent patterns
Hail damage is often invisible from the ground and requires a roof-level inspection to identify. If your car was dented by hail, your roof almost certainly was too.
Rain and Water Damage
Wind-driven rain during hurricanes and nor’easters causes damage that’s different from a typical roof leak:
- Water intrusion at wall-to-roof junctions where rain was pushed horizontally
- Flooding through roof vents that aren’t rated for wind-driven rain
- Saturation of roof decking through shingle nail holes when shingles are lifted by wind
This is exactly the type of damage that a FORTIFIED roof is designed to prevent — the sealed roof deck acts as a secondary water barrier even when shingles are compromised.
When to Call a Professional
Call Immediately If:
- You see daylight through your roof deck
- Water is actively dripping into your home
- Large sections of shingles are missing
- Tree limbs have punctured the roof
- Structural sagging is visible from inside or outside
Schedule an Inspection Within a Week If:
- You notice granule accumulation in gutters after a storm
- Shingles appear lifted or creased but not missing
- You find small water stains on upper-floor ceilings
- Your neighbors are getting storm damage repairs (the same storm hit your roof too)
- Any significant hurricane or tropical storm passed through the area — even if you don’t see obvious damage
Have It Checked at Your Next Convenience If:
- Minor debris impacts from small branches
- A single shingle is out of place
- Gutters were clogged and overflowed during heavy rain
Homeowners often ask us, “Should I get my roof inspected even if I don’t see damage after a storm?” If it was a significant event — a hurricane, tropical storm, or severe thunderstorm with 60+ mph gusts — yes. Some of the most costly damage is invisible from the ground. A professional inspection catches problems before they become emergencies.
What Happens During a Professional Storm Damage Inspection
When you call Breeze Roofing for a storm damage inspection, here’s what we do:
- Exterior ground assessment: We walk the perimeter documenting visible damage to roofing, gutters, siding, and soffit.
- Roof-level inspection: We get on the roof and inspect every square foot — every slope, valley, ridge, penetration, and flashing detail.
- Interior check: We inspect the attic for water intrusion signs and check upper-floor ceilings for staining.
- Documentation: Every finding is photographed and catalogued. If you need to file an insurance claim, this documentation is invaluable.
- Written report: You get a clear assessment: what’s damaged, what’s at risk, and what we recommend — repair or replacement.
We don’t charge for storm damage inspections, and we never pressure you into work you don’t need. If your roof is fine, we’ll tell you.
Don’t Wait — Storm Damage Gets Worse
The single most important thing to understand about storm damage: it never gets better on its own, and it always gets worse with time. A lifted shingle becomes a missing shingle in the next storm. A small leak becomes a mold problem in Wilmington’s humidity. A cracked flashing seal becomes a waterfall in the next heavy rain.
After hurricanes Florence and Dorian, we worked with homeowners who waited months to address what started as minor damage. By the time they called, minor had become major, and repair had become replacement.
Schedule Your Free Storm Damage Inspection
If you’ve been through a storm and you’re not sure about your roof’s condition, let us take a look. It costs nothing, takes about an hour, and gives you peace of mind — or a clear action plan if there’s a problem.
Call (910) 665-5277 any time. We respond quickly after storms because we know time matters. Serving Wilmington, Wrightsville Beach, Carolina Beach, Leland, Hampstead, Surf City, Topsail Beach, and all of New Hanover, Brunswick, and Pender counties.
Breeze Roofing provides free storm damage inspections for homeowners across the Wilmington, NC area. We’re a local, licensed contractor — not a storm chaser — and we’ve been repairing and replacing storm-damaged roofs on the Cape Fear coast for years.