Hurricane readiness inspection
Florida storm season tests every bolt, clamp, and flashing on your roof. We inspect your solar system before the season peaks and document exactly where it stands.
The small things a hurricane finds first
High wind does not attack the strongest part of a solar system. It finds the loose fastener, the lifted flashing, the sagging wire. Our inspection goes looking for those first.
Mounting hardware
Rails, clamps, and fasteners checked for corrosion, loosening, and missing pieces. Hardware that held fine in a breeze behaves differently at hurricane speeds.
Attachment points
Every point where the array anchors to your roof structure. This is where uplift concentrates, and it is where we spend the most time.
Flashing condition
Seals and flashing around every roof penetration. Lifted or cracked flashing lets driving rain into your roof deck long before the wind does damage.
Wire management
Sagging conductors, worn insulation, and loose clips. Wiring that flaps in high wind chafes, arcs, and fails when you need the system most.
Loose components
Junction boxes, conduit, covers, and trim. Anything that can move in a storm becomes a projectile or a leak path. We secure or flag it.
Photo documentation
Every finding is photographed and logged. You get a written readiness report, not a verbal thumbs up from a ladder.
A written record, before the weather writes its own
The inspection ends with a written readiness report you keep. It tells you what is solid, what needs attention, and what it all looked like before the season.
- Photo documentation of mounting hardware, flashing, and wiring condition
- Findings ranked by priority, in plain language
- Recommended fixes quoted separately, with office review before payment
- A documented baseline to compare against after a storm
If a storm does come through
Request a post storm assessment. We inspect the system, compare it against your readiness report, and document any changes with photos. That record is exactly what you want in hand when you talk to your insurer.
One visit, one clear report
Our office calls within one business day to confirm your address and schedule the visit. An inspection reduces risk; it is not a guarantee against storm damage. Prefer the phone? 866-412-4218.
Request the inspection
Schedule any time, though before June is ideal. Hurricane readiness inspections are an approved fixed price service, so you know the price before we book it.
We inspect the array
A licensed technician works through mounting hardware, attachment points, flashing, wire management, and loose components.
You get the report
Written findings with photo documentation, ranked by priority. What is solid stays on record too.
Fixes quoted separately
Anything that needs attention is quoted on its own, and every quote goes through office review before any payment is collected.
Hurricane readiness questions
When should I schedule a readiness inspection?
Florida storm season runs June through November, so spring is the ideal window. That said, the middle of the season is still better than never, and loose hardware is worth catching in any month. We also perform post storm assessments after a storm has passed.
Will the inspection guarantee my system survives a hurricane?
No, and you should be suspicious of anyone who says otherwise. A readiness inspection reduces risk by catching loose hardware, compromised flashing, and worn wiring before the wind finds them. It is not a guarantee against storm damage. What it does guarantee is that you know the true condition of your system, in writing, with photos.
Are storm damage repairs covered by an AllSolar Cares membership?
No. Storm damage repairs are not included in any membership plan, and membership is not insurance and not an equipment warranty. If a storm damages your system, we assess it, document everything with photos, and quote the repair with office review before payment. Your readiness report gives that process a documented starting point.
Inspect it before the season tests it
One visit, an approved fixed price, and a written report with photos. That is what ready looks like.