StormProof → for public adjusters
When the carrier disputes the date of loss, cite the record.
Every contested hail claim eventually turns on the same question: what does the official record show happened near this address, and when? StormProof answers it in seconds, in a format built to be attached to an appeal — not screenshotted from a map UI.
In the file
- Every NWS-recorded event within 1, 3 and 10 miles of the risk, back 15 years — hail size, max gust, distance, and the official NWS narrative for each, with the source (Storm Events final vs SPC preliminary) and data vintage labeled per row.
- The disputed date highlighted with a plain-English finding the desk adjuster can verify against NOAA directly — every line carries its citation.
- Prior-storm history on the same page — useful both ways: establishing the loss date and anticipating the carrier’s pre-existing-damage argument before they make it.
- Permanent link + clean print view — attach the PDF, or put the link in the demand so the carrier can check the sources themselves.
Why neutrality matters
Reports live on HailEvidence, a neutral evidence site: methodology public, every figure cited to NOAA, honest about what point/path observations can and cannot show. An exhibit is only as strong as its source looks when opposing counsel googles it.
The caveat we won’t bury: NWS records are point and path observations. The absence of a nearby report does NOT prove that no hail fell at this address — it means no observation was logged nearby. A report of nearby hail documents the event; it does not by itself prove damage to a specific structure. Reports state this plainly —
in our experience that candor is what makes the rest of the document credible.
Numbers
$99/month, unlimited addresses, nationwide, cancel anytime. Working a claim right now? A single extended report is $49 on HailEvidence — judge it on a real file before subscribing.