St. Louis and Metro East homeowners lose an average of $15,000-$48,000 when they accept low offers on tornado, hail, and storm damage claims. Here's how to fight back.
⚠️ After St. Louis-area severe storms, insurance companies routinely underpay by $12,000-$45,000 per claim. Your policy covers wind and hail—but you must prove scope and causation.
St. Louis sits at the confluence of the Missouri and Mississippi Rivers in a severe weather corridor. The metro experiences significant severe thunderstorms with large hail, tornadoes and damaging straight-line winds, Mississippi River and flash flooding, and derecho events. St. Louis County and the Metro East (Illinois) see multiple significant weather events annually. These conditions create specific claim challenges:
The Missouri Department of Insurance regulates Missouri policies. File complaints at insurance.mo.gov or call 800-726-7390. Illinois residents should contact the Illinois Department of Insurance. Your leverage comes from thorough documentation, contractor estimates, and strategic use of your policy's appraisal clause.
Understanding local risks helps you document claims correctly:
St. Louis experiences significant hail, particularly spring and summer. Large hail damages roofs, siding, gutters, and HVAC. Document hail size with a ruler, obtain NWS reports, and match damage to the storm. Insurers often underestimate damage requiring full replacement.
The St. Louis metro sees tornadoes and occasional derecho events with 70-90 mph winds. Document wind direction, match damage to storm tracks, and photograph structural damage. Straight-line winds cause extensive roof and siding damage.
River flooding is excluded—NFIP covers flood. Sewer and water backup may require an endorsement. Document the water source. Wind-driven rain through roof or window openings may be covered under the wind peril.
Missouri law and your homeowner policy provide tools to secure fair settlements:
Take comprehensive photos and video within 24-48 hours. For hail, capture damage with a ruler. For wind, document roof and structural damage. For water, document the source. Obtain NWS storm reports. Keep all correspondence with your insurer.
Obtain at least three detailed estimates from licensed St. Louis metro contractors. Ensure estimates include line-item scope and reflect current pricing. Metro labor rates exceed many insurer databases.
Compare the insurer's estimate to your contractor estimates. Identify missing scope, quantity errors, and pricing gaps. Build a detailed discrepancy list.
Send a structured demand letter with your comparison, contractor estimates, photos, weather data, and policy references. Request a response within 15-30 days. Cite Missouri DOI expectations and reference appraisal rights.
If the insurer won't negotiate, invoke appraisal if your policy allows. File a complaint with the Missouri Department of Insurance. Most St. Louis claims resolve for $15,000-$49,000 more with proper documentation.
St. Louis policyholders recover an average of $18,000-$46,000 more with proper documentation and negotiation. Get the tools to build your case.
Start Your Claim ReviewAvoid these errors that cost Metro East homeowners thousands:
St. Louis homeowners who document and negotiate correctly see substantial increases:
Claim Command Pro gives you the same tools public adjusters use—without the 10-15% fee. For a flat $197, you get AI-powered estimate comparison, demand letter templates tailored to Missouri law, step-by-step appraisal guidance, and St. Louis metro pricing benchmarks. Public adjusters charge $4,000-$7,500 on a $50,000 claim. Claim Command Pro costs $197—most St. Louis users recover $18,000-$46,000 more than initial offers.
St. Louis faces severe thunderstorms, large hail, tornadoes, damaging straight-line winds, Mississippi River flooding, and flash floods.
Contact the Missouri Department of Insurance online at insurance.mo.gov or call 800-726-7390.
Most Missouri homeowner policies include an appraisal clause. Each party hires an appraiser; a neutral umpire resolves disputes.
High claim volume leads to rushed inspections. Insurers use below-market St. Louis metro pricing and attribute damage to age.
Standard policies exclude flood. NFIP covers flood. Water backup may require an endorsement. Document the water source.
Public adjusters charge 10-15% of the settlement. Claim Command Pro provides the same tools for a flat $197.