Siding and Exterior Damage Restoration from Storms
Storm events subject a building's exterior envelope — siding, cladding, trim, fascia, and soffit — to forces that range from slow moisture infiltration to sudden impact damage. Understanding how restoration professionals assess, classify, and repair exterior storm damage is essential for property owners, insurance adjusters, and contractors navigating post-event recovery. This page covers the definition and scope of siding and exterior damage restoration, the process framework restoration contractors follow, common storm scenarios that produce exterior failures, and the decision thresholds that distinguish repair from full replacement.
Definition and scope
Siding and exterior damage restoration is the structured process of returning a building's outer protective layer to its pre-loss condition following wind, hail, ice, debris, or flood-related storm events. The exterior envelope includes all cladding materials — vinyl, fiber cement, wood lap, engineered wood, stucco, brick veneer, aluminum, and steel panels — as well as the assemblies attached to the roof's lower edge: soffits, fascia boards, gutters, and exterior trim.
The scope of exterior restoration overlaps with roof damage restoration after storm at the eave line and with structural damage assessment when framing or sheathing behind the cladding is compromised. The International Building Code (IBC), published by the International Code Council (ICC), governs minimum performance standards for exterior wall assemblies, and state-adopted versions of IBC set local compliance thresholds that restoration work must meet or exceed (ICC, International Building Code).
Material classification matters for scope definition:
- Barrier systems — Vinyl, aluminum, and steel siding that rely on the material itself to deflect water.
- Drainage plane systems — Fiber cement and wood lap siding that drain water behind the cladding through a weather-resistive barrier (WRB).
- Mass wall systems — Stucco, EIFS (Exterior Insulation and Finish Systems), and brick veneer that absorb and release moisture as part of their function.
Each system responds differently to storm forces and requires a distinct restoration approach.
How it works
Exterior storm damage restoration follows a defined sequence of phases:
- Damage documentation — Contractors photograph and measure every affected surface before any material is removed. The Institute of Inspection, Cleaning and Restoration Certification (IICRC) and the insurance industry's Xactimate estimating platform both require photo-documented scope before work authorization. See storm damage documentation best practices for field protocols.
- Moisture assessment — Because breached siding allows water behind the WRB, moisture meters and thermal imaging cameras identify saturation in sheathing and wall cavities. ASTM International standard ASTM E2128 covers evaluating water leakage in building walls (ASTM International, ASTM E2128).
- Weather-resistive barrier inspection — The WRB beneath the siding (commonly 30-lb felt or housewrap products meeting ASTM E1677) is inspected for tears, punctures, and lap failures. Damaged WRB must be replaced before new cladding is installed to comply with IBC Section 1404.2.
- Sheathing evaluation — Oriented strand board (OSB) or plywood sheathing panels that register above 19% moisture content by weight are typically flagged for replacement before re-cladding, per standards referenced in IICRC standards for storm restoration.
- Cladding removal and disposal — Damaged panels are removed to defined boundaries. Partial-panel repairs on vinyl and aluminum often result in color-match failures, a key driver of full-section replacement decisions.
- Installation and code compliance — New cladding is installed to manufacturer specifications and the adopted IBC version. Many jurisdictions require a building permit for siding replacement that exceeds a defined square-footage threshold.
- Final inspection — A licensed building inspector or third-party consultant verifies installation compliance, particularly at penetrations, corners, and window/door interfaces.
Common scenarios
Different types of storm damage produce distinct exterior failure patterns:
- Hail impact — Hailstones 1 inch in diameter or larger commonly crack vinyl, dent aluminum, and fracture fiber cement panels. Hail damage restoration protocols often require full-elevation replacement because spot repairs create thermal expansion mismatches.
- High-wind and tornado events — Wind-driven debris punctures siding and can displace entire panel runs. Wind damage restoration and tornado damage restoration frequently expose bare sheathing, necessitating emergency tarping (see emergency board-up and tarping) before moisture infiltration begins.
- Ice storm damage — Ice accumulation at soffits and fascia causes wood rot and mechanical stress on aluminum profiles. Ice storm damage restoration frequently reveals pre-existing moisture damage that complicates insurance scope negotiations.
- Hurricane wind and rain — Sustained winds exceeding 90 mph (the threshold for ASCE 7-22 Wind Exposure Category C in many coastal zones) can strip full elevations of siding. Hurricane damage restoration is additionally subject to Florida's Florida Building Code (FBC) or Texas Department of Insurance wind-resistant construction standards in high-wind zones.
- Flood-related wicking — Even without direct flood contact, storm-driven ground saturation can wick into wood-framed walls through the base of siding runs, producing mold risk documented in storm damage moisture and mold risk.
Decision boundaries
The central decision in exterior restoration is repair versus full replacement, driven by four factors:
| Factor | Repair threshold | Replacement threshold |
|---|---|---|
| Affected area | Less than 25% of a single elevation | 25% or more of an elevation, or total loss of color match |
| Sheathing condition | No saturation above 19% MC | Saturation, delamination, or structural compromise |
| WRB integrity | Localized punctures patchable per manufacturer specs | Widespread failure or incompatible product generations |
| Code compliance | Existing installation meets current adopted IBC | Jurisdiction requires full-elevation upgrade to current code |
A licensed contractor's scope of work — defined in storm restoration scope of work — must document which threshold applies to each elevation. This determination directly affects insurance claim valuation under the Actual Cash Value (ACV) versus Replacement Cost Value (RCV) frameworks used by adjusters; storm damage insurance claims restoration covers those frameworks in detail.
The distinction between temporary repairs versus permanent restoration also applies: emergency tarping or foam-plug patches on breached siding are not code-compliant permanent repairs and do not satisfy IBC weatherproofing requirements. Contractor licensing requirements governing who may perform permitted siding work vary by state and are covered in storm restoration contractor licensing.
References
- ICC — International Building Code (IBC)
- ASTM International — ASTM E2128: Standard Guide for Evaluating Water Leakage of Building Walls
- IICRC — Institute of Inspection, Cleaning and Restoration Certification
- ASCE 7-22: Minimum Design Loads and Associated Criteria for Buildings and Other Structures — American Society of Civil Engineers
- ASTM E1677: Standard Specification for Air Retarder (AR) Material or System for Framed Building Walls — ASTM International
- Florida Building Code — Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation
- Texas Department of Insurance — Windstorm Inspection Program
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