Wind-driven Rain Vs. Flood — the Distinction That Determines Coverage
This distinction matters because it determines which insurance policy pays. Wind-driven rain that enters through a damaged building envelope (wind broke a window, lifted shingles let rain through the roof, damaged siding admitted water laterally) is covered by standard homeowners insurance as wind/storm damage. Rising surface water that enters at ground level — overland flooding, stream overflow, surge — is FLOOD damage, which standard homeowners does NOT cover. That requires NFIP (National Flood Insurance Program) flood insurance.
For NJ properties, both can happen in the same storm. Our documentation clarifies the source of intrusion so the right policy pays the right portion. Photos of where water entered (broken roof = wind; rising at ground level = flood), measurements of high-water marks, narrative of the timeline (wind hit first vs flood arrived later) — all become part of the cause-of-loss record.
Misclassification is one of the most common reasons NJ storm-damage claims get denied or under-paid. We frame the loss honestly — neither inflating to chase coverage nor under-stating to make a claim go away — so the carrier can settle the right portion under the right policy.