Guide

Hurricane Shutters And Wind Mitigation Credits

This guide focuses on wind mitigation questions for coastal homes. Use it as a pre-quote reading note, not as a substitute for a policy review.

Pre-quote checks for hurricane shutters and wind mitigation credits

Readers usually arrive at hurricane shutters and wind mitigation credits through a price question. The better first step is to verify the facts behind wind mitigation questions for coastal homes.

  • Roof installation year, material, and permit records.
  • Whether the quote uses replacement cost, ACV, or a roof schedule.
  • Cosmetic damage wording for metal, tile, or architectural shingles.
  • Separate wind, hail, hurricane, or named storm deductible.
  • Photos of roof condition before the policy binds.

Editor note: Roof-related pages are intentionally document-heavy because roof condition is one of the fastest ways a quote changes after underwriting.

Questions worth asking before you bind

QuestionWhy it matters
Is roof settlement replacement cost or ACV?Older roofs can change the real value of the quote.
Does cosmetic damage have a limitation?Hail dents may be treated differently from functional damage.
Will an inspection happen after binding?Some carriers change terms after reviewing roof condition.
Which deductible applies to wind or hail?A percentage deductible can be much higher than a flat deductible.

Records that make the comparison cleaner

  • Roof permit, installation invoice, and recent exterior photos.
  • Wind or hail mitigation form if the state or carrier uses one.
  • Inspection notes that mention age, material, slope, or prior repairs.
  • Current declarations page showing the wind or hurricane deductible.