Roof Repair vs. Replacement After St. Louis Storm Damage

Revolve Construction · Blog

Roof Repair vs. Replacement After St. Louis Storm Damage

Roof repair or replacement after St. Louis storms? Learn the key signs of damage and how to decide the right move to protect your home and budget.

When you live in the St. Louis metro, you learn to read the sky. One night it’s quiet over Kirkwood; the next, a line of storms drops quarter-size hail over Florissant and sends tree limbs across Clayton. Add our humid summers and winter freeze–thaw, and you’ve got a roof that works hard year-round. If your shingles lifted in last week’s wind, or you’re spotting a brown ring on the bedroom ceiling, the big question lands fast: fix it or replace it? Revolve Construction has been helping St. Louis families answer that question since 2008—with plain-spoken assessments, code-smart installations, and zero scare tactics.

St. Louis sits in a clash zone for Gulf moisture and Midwest cold fronts. Spring through early summer is our busy season for severe weather; that’s when strong updrafts can produce storm damaging and straight-line winds. The National Weather Service office in St. Louis even tracks hail climatology for Missouri and Illinois to help forecast risk, underscoring how often hailstones become a factor here. And statewide climatology notes that roughly 60% of Missouri’s thunderstorms occur May through August , which aligns with the calls we get from Chesterfield to Soulard.

Hail size matters. As a rule of thumb, 1-inch (quarter-size) hail meets the severe threshold , and that’s often where shingle bruising and fractured mats start to show up, especially on older roofs. The National Weather Service’s hail size chart is what many spotters and adjusters use to keep terminology consistent.

Wind is the other culprit. Gusts peel up the leading edges of shingles, breaking the sealant bond; repeated lift can crease tabs and open pathways for water. In winter, quick thaws refreeze overnight, creating ice along eaves and in gutters. That freeze–thaw cycle can push water under shingles and into soffits if the roof edge, flashing, or ventilation is marginal.

If you suspect damage, here’s the calm path that keeps you protected and makes any future claim easier:

We’ll arrive with fall protection, camera documentation, and a checklist tuned to hail and wind damage in our region. If we find open seams, missing shingle strips, exposed fasteners, or punctured vents, we stabilize first—rain doesn’t wait for paperwork.

You don’t need a ladder to get a straight answer. These are the levers we look at, and we’ll walk them with you at the kitchen table.

1) Age & condition. Architectural asphalt shingles on St. Louis homes commonly last 18–25 years, but that range tightens with poor ventilation, lots of shade, or recent storm history. If granule loss is heavy in the valleys, if the shingle mats feel brittle at the edges, or if the deck shows soft spots along eaves, you may be paying for repeated leak chases. In those cases, replacement is often cheaper over a five- to ten-year horizon than patch-work repairs.

2) Scope & recurrence. One lifted ridge cap or a popped nail under a boot vent? That’s a classic repair. Leaks showing on multiple ceilings, or a history of “we fixed that corner last year” calls? That points to systemic issues—aging underlayment, tired flashing, or design gaps—that a reroof solves in one controlled project.

3) Storm severity & pattern. Hail leaves a pattern that pros can recognize: bruises that feel soft to the touch, fractures in the shingle mat, granule craters exposing asphalt. Wind leaves creases and broken seals. If quarter-size hail hit your block, we’ll check ridge caps, vents, and the windward slopes first; if it was golf-ball size in parts of St. Charles, we’ll evaluate more aggressively for cracked mats and dented metals. Again, the NWS size chart keeps “quarter” and “golf ball” language consistent. [NWS hail size reference].

4) Code, ventilation, and “if we’re opening it anyway.” When a roof is stripped, that’s the right time to fix attic ventilation and edge details. Building codes call for minimum ventilation ratios (commonly 1 square foot of net-free vent area per 150 square feet of attic , with a 1/300 exception when certain conditions are met). Balanced intake at the soffit and exhaust at the ridge helps shingles run cooler in summer and reduces winter moisture.

5) Budget & timing. If your roof is mid-life and damage is localized, repair is sensible. If it’s late-life and storm-hit across multiple slopes, replacement compresses future risk into one scheduled project. Either way, we’ll show line-item options so you can weigh the cost of recurring calls versus a full reset.

A homeowner off West Essex Ave in Kirkwood calls the morning after a spring squall. Neighbors mention “quarter-to-ping-pong” hail overnight. From the ground we see granules washing at the downspouts and a dented mailbox—good clues without climbing.

Day 0: Our inspector documents shingles, ridge caps, pipe boots, and box vents. The north and west slopes show 8–12 hail bruises per test square, with a few torn tabs near the hip. The attic has light staining near a bath fan but no active drip. We tarp the ridge and one penetration before the afternoon rain.

Day 1–3: We share photos and a written assessment, then meet the adjuster on site. We compare hail size to the NWS chart language to keep everybody aligned. The adjuster agrees the windward slopes and ridge are compromised.

Week 2: The owner chooses architectural shingles with a high-wind nailing pattern and upgraded underlayment at valleys and eaves. Because we’re opening the roof, we also rebalance ventilation with continuous soffit intake and a low-profile ridge vent to meet the IRC ventilation ratio . The project passes inspection, and gutters get re-pitched to cure a chronic overflow at the back patio. Total on-site time: two days, plus one for gutters. The leak ring on the hall ceiling never returns.

Architectural asphalt shingles (the neighborhood standard). They balance cost, curb appeal, and installation speed. If you’re in a hail-prone pocket of St. Louis County or St. Charles County, impact-resistant (IR) shingles are worth a look. Independent testing from the Insurance Institute for Business & Home Safety (IBHS) digs deeper than the familiar UL 2218 classification, focusing on how shingles perform under more realistic hail impacts—useful context when you’re deciding on an upgrade.

Underlayment and edges. We recommend a self-adhered ice-and-water membrane at eaves, valleys, and around penetrations—especially important with our freeze–thaw swings along the Missouri and Mississippi river bluffs.

Flat sections and light commercial roofs. For small businesses in Maplewood or mixed-use buildings in Central West End, single-ply systems (TPO or EPDM) handle ponding and foot traffic better than shingles. Tapered insulation adds slope to stubborn flat areas, and properly sized scuppers/outlets keep water moving during those intense summer downpours.

Ventilation and heat. A balanced system—soffit intake paired with ridge exhaust—keeps shingle temps reasonable in July and helps purge attic humidity after those August storms that leave the air feeling like soup. Again, the 1/150 (or 1/300 exception) framework is our code baseline, not a sales add-on.

Permitting and inspections vary across the St. Louis metro. St. Louis County publishes a Residential Re-Roofing Checklist that outlines when a permit is required—for example, certain low slopes, sheathing replacement over set thresholds, or material changes. Commercial reroofs have their own triggers. We follow these rules so you don’t have to memorize them.

Inside the City of St. Louis , the Building Division explains that permits are required for structural changes and major alterations; routine maintenance may not need a permit. During our pre-construction walkthrough, we’ll confirm whether your scope involves permitting and arrange inspections around weather so your project stays on track.

Bottom line: we’re pragmatic. If a permit is required, we pull it, schedule inspections, and build to pass the first time.

We’re not lawyers, and we don’t promise outcomes. What we do is document thoroughly , meet adjusters on time, and keep your home weather-tight while decisions are made. In Missouri, consumer guidance notes that insurers must acknowledge receipt of a claim within 10 working days —that doesn’t mean approval, but it’s a helpful timing benchmark so you’re not wondering if your notice was received. We’ll show you how to organize photos, keep receipts for emergency tarping, and prepare a clean, line-item scope.

If you decide to file, call your carrier promptly, then let us coordinate a joint site visit so everyone sees the same roof, from CWE ridge caps to that stubborn valley over your Soulard addition.

Quarter-size (1-inch) hail marks the severe threshold and can bruise or fracture aging shingles, especially on windward slopes and ridge caps. Bigger stones increase risk.

It depends on location and scope. St. Louis County’s Residential Re-Roofing Checklist spells out triggers like certain slopes, sheathing replacement percentages, or changing materials; the City of St. Louis requires permits for major alterations. We’ll confirm and handle the paperwork.

Small stains can come from a single fastener hole or a larger flashing issue. We’ll trace it, moisture-meter it, and advise whether a targeted repair or a bigger fix is smarter.

It’s code math for attic airflow. Minimum is typically 1 square foot of net-free vent area per 150 square feet of attic ; a 1/300 exception applies when certain conditions are met, and we balance intake at soffits with exhaust at the ridge.

If your area repeatedly sees hail (many in West County and St. Charles do), IR shingles can reduce damage risk. IBHS research compares how shingles actually perform under more realistic hail impacts—useful when choosing.

Quickly. Document first, then notify. Missouri consumer guidance says insurers must acknowledge your claim within 10 working days ; that’s not legal advice or a guarantee, just a timing guardrail. We can share your photos and scope to keep things organized.

Whether you’re in Central West End, Chesterfield , or across the river in St. Charles, Revolve Construction will give you a clear, same-day inspection and a no-pressure plan. If a tarp is needed, our 24/7 emergency team is on it. If a repair solves it, great. If a replacement is smarter, we’ll show you why—photos, code notes, the works. Book your free storm-damage assessment today and let’s protect your home the right way—neighbor to neighbor, since 2008.

St. Louis weather reality: why roofs fail here

The first 72 hours after a storm (and when to tarp)

Mini case study: 1950s ranch in Kirkwood after a hail cell (hypothetical)

Materials that make sense in the STL metro

Permits, inspections, and “will this pass?” across the metro

Insurance & documentation — guidance, not legal advice

How Revolve Construction (Since 2008) handles your project

How big does hail need to be to damage a roof?

Do I need a permit to replace my roof?

What if I only see a small stain inside?

What’s the 1/150 vs. 1/300 ventilation thing?

Are impact-resistant shingles worth it here?

How fast should I call my insurer after a storm?

Ready for a straight answer?

Repair vs. replace — a simple, plain-spoken framework

Revolve Construction specializes in roofing, exteriors, and interiors for both residential and commercial projects. With a dedicated team and years of experience, we deliver top-quality results tailored to your needs.

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