Seven questions you can answer from the driveway — roof age, hail history, and what you can see from the ground. To be straight with you up front: this is a from-the-ground check, and some hail damage is invisible from below. Only a roof-level inspection can tell for sure.
Is your roof 15 or more years old?
Not sure? Closing documents or a past permit usually show the install year.
Has hail hit your area since the roof was installed?
Not sure? Your town's verified NOAA record is on our hail history page.
From the ground, do you see curling or cupped shingle edges?
Do you see bald spots where granules have worn away, or any cracked or missing shingles?
Is there sandy, grit-like granule buildup in the gutters or at the base of downspouts?
After a storm, have you noticed dents on gutters, downspouts, or metal roof vents?
Have you had a roof-level inspection since the last big hail in your area?
0 of 7 answered — your honest read appears when all seven are done.
Every question comes from what we already publish: the ground-visible signs of hail damage, the honest math on how long roofs actually last in Colorado, and the verified NOAA hail record for the towns we serve. Your answers stay in your browser — the only thing we count is an anonymous “someone finished the check” tally, and your answers are never sent anywhere unless you choose to contact us.
And what we won't do: no scare tactics, no countdowns, no risk scores. A from-the-ground check can't see hail bruising — the damage that matters most — so whatever result you get is a starting point, not a verdict. The roof-level inspection that settles it is free and no-pressure, and “your roof is fine” is a perfectly good outcome.