Spring in Central Texas is beautiful and brutal. The same warm, humid air that makes April and May so pleasant also fuels the severe thunderstorms that roll across the Waco area year after year. Hail, straight-line winds, torrential rain, and even the occasional tornado are a regular part of life for homeowners across McLennan, Bell, Hill, and Bosque counties.
What many homeowners don’t realize is that storm damage is often invisible from the ground. You might walk outside after a storm, see no broken windows, and assume everything is fine. But up on the roof and inside your walls, something else could be unfolding. Water intrusion, cracked shingles, displaced flashing, and compressed insulation can all begin after a single significant storm and quietly worsen for months before a visible symptom ever appears inside the home.
Understanding the most common types of storm damage, and knowing what to do after a storm passes, can be the difference between a manageable repair and a costly, insurance-complicated disaster.
1. Hail Damage
Hail is the number-one cause of roof insurance claims in Texas, and for good reason. Even hailstones the size of a marble can crack shingle granules, bruise the underlying mat, and compromise the waterproofing layers beneath. Once that protective surface is broken, UV rays and moisture accelerate the deterioration. Hail damage often looks like dark spots or dimples on asphalt shingles, subtle enough that most homeowners never notice until water is dripping from the ceiling.
Larger hailstones, anything above an inch in diameter, can cause immediate and visible damage: broken skylights, dented gutters and downspouts, cracked tile or slate, and in severe cases, punctures through the roof decking itself. After any storm with golf-ball-sized hail or larger, a professional inspection should be considered a priority, not an optional follow-up.
2. Wind Damage
Sustained winds of 50 to 70 mph, which are not uncommon in Central Texas spring storms, can lift shingle edges, crack ridge caps, and tear flashing away from chimneys and vents. Even if shingles aren’t visibly missing, wind-lifted edges allow water to sneak underneath during the next rain. Fascia boards and soffit panels are also vulnerable and, if damaged, create an open invitation for pests and moisture to enter your attic space.
Wind damage is especially deceptive because it often looks minor from street level. A few lifted shingles or a slightly bent ridge vent may not seem urgent, but each of those small breaches is an ongoing entry point for moisture every time it rains.
3. Falling Debris
Limbs, branches, and in severe cases entire trees can fall across a roof during a storm. Even a relatively small branch can crack decking, puncture underlayment, or displace the flashing around a vent pipe. The damage may be localized, but it creates a direct path for water into your attic and eventually your ceiling. Debris damage is also frequently underestimated because it does not always look dramatic from the outside.
4. Gutters and Drainage
Bent, clogged, or torn gutters are an underappreciated consequence of heavy storms. When gutters fail to direct water away from the structure, it overflows along the foundation, pools against the siding, and seeps into crawl spaces and basements. Over time, this leads to wood rot, mold growth, and structural settlement. A storm that looks minor can leave behind a gutter system that no longer functions, and that failure can cause far more damage during the next rainfall than the storm itself did.
5. Attic and Interior Water Intrusion
Even when a roof looks intact from the outside, water can find its way into the attic through small gaps or compromised seals around penetrations. Homeowners often dismiss a faint water stain on the ceiling as a one-time event, but moisture in the attic creates ideal conditions for mold growth and can compromise roof decking and insulation over time. An inspection that includes the attic interior can catch these issues before they escalate.
Walking the perimeter of your home after a storm is a good start, but it is not enough. A trained inspector can safely access your roof, identify damage that is not visible from ground level, and document findings in a detailed, photo-supported report. That documentation is also critical if you plan to file a homeowner’s insurance claim. Insurers want evidence, and a professionally prepared inspection report carries far more weight than a homeowner’s photos taken from a ladder.
At Upright Professional Inspections, our licensed professionals have years of experience in construction and inspection across Central Texas. We know exactly what storm damage looks like and what it means for the long-term health of your home. Our roof inspections include an objective assessment of every visible component plus an estimated remaining service life for your roof, so you have a complete picture of where things stand.
If your home has been through a significant storm, here is a practical checklist to follow before calling your insurance company or a contractor:
The cost of a professional roof inspection is a fraction of what deferred maintenance can turn into. Water damage that starts in the attic can migrate to ceiling joists, drywall, electrical wiring, and insulation over just a few months. By the time a homeowner notices the ceiling stain, the underlying damage is often extensive. You can also learn more about how biological growth like algae and moss can compound storm damage in our guide to roof growths.
If a significant storm has passed through your area, whether you are in Waco, Temple, Corsicana, Georgetown, Cleburne, or anywhere in our Central Texas service area, give us a call. We will tell you exactly what you are working with, in plain language, the same day we inspect.