Does insurance cover a roof leak?
Last updated: 2026-06-17
Roof leak coverage comes down to one question the adjuster will ask: was the leak caused by a sudden event, or by the roof simply wearing out? Standard homeowners policies cover the former and exclude the latter. This is general information, not legal or insurance advice — your policy language and adjuster decide your claim.
When a roof leak is typically covered
If a sudden, covered peril damaged the roof and let water in, the leak — and the interior damage it caused — is generally covered. Common covered causes:
- Wind that tears off or lifts shingles.
- Hail that punctures or cracks the roofing.
- A falling tree or limb that breaches the roof.
- Other storm damage that suddenly opens the roof to water.
When a roof leak is typically excluded
- Wear and tear / age — a roof at the end of its life that simply starts leaking.
- Lack of maintenance — missing or curling shingles, clogged valleys, or known issues left unaddressed.
- Improper installation or pre-existing defects.
- Gradual deterioration — slow leaks that developed over time rather than from one event.
How the interior water damage is treated
Here's the key linkage: the interior damage usually follows the roof's coverage. If a storm caused the roof damage (covered), the water damage to your ceiling, drywall, insulation, and belongings is generally covered too. If the leak is ruled wear-and-tear (excluded), the interior damage is typically excluded as well. That's why the cause of the roof leak is the whole ballgame.
Roof age and how claims are paid
The age and condition of your roof affects both whether a claim is approved and how it's paid. Many insurers cover older roofs at actual cash value (replacement cost minus depreciation) rather than full replacement cost, and a roof near the end of its rated life is more likely to draw a wear-and-tear denial. Keeping records of roof inspections and repairs helps establish that you maintained it.
Act fast and document the cause
Whatever the cause, mitigate right away — tarp the roof if safe, catch the water, and move belongings — then document everything before cleanup. Storm timing and the nature of the damage are what an adjuster weighs, so clear photos of the cause matter. A vetted local pro can dry out the interior, prevent secondary mold, and document the loss. Connect with a storm damage pro or a water damage pro to get help and get the loss documented.
Frequently asked questions
- Usually yes if the leak was caused by a sudden, covered event — wind, hail, or a falling tree that damaged the roof. It's usually not covered if the leak is from age, wear and tear, or a roof that wasn't maintained.
- If the roof damage itself is covered (e.g., storm-caused), the resulting interior water damage to ceilings, walls, and belongings is generally covered too. If the roof leak is excluded (wear and tear), the interior damage is typically excluded along with it.
- The most common reason is that the adjuster attributed the leak to age or wear and tear rather than a sudden event, or to deferred maintenance (missing shingles you should have replaced). Roof age matters — older roofs are more likely to be ruled wear-and-tear, and some policies cover them at actual cash value rather than replacement cost.
- Mitigate immediately — place buckets, move belongings, and tarp the roof if it's safe — then document the damage and the cause, and open your claim promptly. Fast action both limits the damage and supports your claim. A restoration pro can dry the interior and document the loss.