Tornado Season Roof Prep: A Central Illinois Homeowner’s Checklist
Every spring, Central Illinois homeowners face a reality that much of the country never has to think about. We live squarely in Tornado Alley’s eastern reach, and when March rolls around, the clock starts ticking. Between 2000 and 2025, Illinois averaged more than 50 confirmed tornadoes per year, and our region from Jacksonville to Springfield to Decatur sits right in the crosshairs.
Your roof is your home’s first and most important line of defense against severe weather. A roof that’s been weakened by winter ice, aging shingles, or deferred maintenance doesn’t stand a chance against 100+ mph straight-line winds or tornado-force gusts. The good news? Most tornado-season roof damage is preventable with the right preparation.
At Campbell Construction, we’ve been protecting Central Illinois homes since 2000. We’ve seen firsthand what a well-prepared roof can withstand and what happens when homeowners skip their pre-season inspection. This checklist covers everything you need to do before the sirens go off.
When Does Tornado Season Hit Central Illinois?
Tornado season in Illinois officially runs from March through June, with the peak danger window falling in April and May. However, severe thunderstorms capable of producing damaging winds, large hail, and tornadoes can occur as early as February and as late as November in our region.
For homeowners in Morgan County, Sangamon County, and surrounding areas, the ideal time to complete your tornado season roof prep is late February through mid-March, before the first severe weather outbreaks of the season. If you’re reading this and haven’t started yet, don’t wait another day.
Critical timing: The National Weather Service’s Springfield office issues an average of 25-35 tornado warnings per season across Central Illinois. Most roof damage occurs during the first major storm event when homeowners haven’t yet completed pre-season prep.
Your Complete Pre-Season Roof Inspection Checklist
Before tornado season arrives, every Central Illinois homeowner should walk through this 15-point inspection checklist. Some items you can check yourself from the ground with binoculars. Others require a professional roof inspection for safety and accuracy.
1. Inspect Shingles for Damage, Curling, or Missing Pieces
Start with the most visible component of your roof. Using binoculars from the ground, scan every visible section for shingles that are cracked, curled, buckled, or missing entirely. Winter freeze-thaw cycles in Central Illinois are brutal on asphalt shingles. Even one missing shingle creates a vulnerability point where wind can get underneath the surrounding shingles and peel them back like a zipper during a tornado or severe thunderstorm.
Pay special attention to south-facing and west-facing slopes, which take the most weather punishment. If you spot more than a handful of damaged shingles, it’s time to call a professional roofing contractor for a full assessment.
2. Check Ridge Caps and Hip Shingles
Ridge caps are the shingles that cover the peak of your roof where two slopes meet. They’re one of the most wind-vulnerable components on any roof because they sit at the highest point where wind speeds are greatest. During a tornado or severe thunderstorm, ridge caps are often the first thing to go.
Look for ridge cap shingles that appear lifted, cracked, or have exposed nail heads. If the sealant strip underneath has failed, those caps can become projectiles in high winds and leave the ridge completely exposed to water infiltration.
3. Examine All Flashing Points
Flashing is the metal material installed around chimneys, vents, skylights, dormers, and where the roof meets a vertical wall. Damaged or loose flashing is one of the leading causes of post-storm roof leaks. Check for rust, separation from the roof surface, missing caulk, or sections that appear bent or lifted.
In Central Illinois, the freeze-thaw cycle can cause flashing to pull away from the surfaces it’s meant to seal. This gap might seem minor, but during a driving rain accompanied by 70+ mph winds, water will find every opening.
4. Inspect Soffit and Fascia
Your soffit (the underside of the roof overhang) and fascia (the vertical board at the edge of the roof) play critical roles in keeping wind and water out of your attic and roof structure. Damaged or rotting soffit panels allow wind to enter the attic space from below, creating uplift pressure that can literally blow your roof off from the inside during a tornado.
Walk the perimeter of your home and look for soft spots, peeling paint, visible rot, holes, or sections where the soffit has separated from the fascia. These repairs are relatively inexpensive compared to the catastrophic damage they can prevent.
5. Clean and Inspect Gutters and Downspouts
Clogged gutters are more than an annoyance. During severe storms, gutters blocked with leaves, shingle granules, and debris cause water to back up under your roof edge, saturating the fascia board and roof decking. This water damage weakens the connection between your roof and the structure it sits on.
Clean all gutters thoroughly, check that downspouts drain at least 4-6 feet away from your foundation, and verify that gutter hangers are secure. Replace any sections that are pulling away from the fascia, sagging, or showing signs of rust and deterioration.
6. Check the Roof Decking from Inside the Attic
Go into your attic on a sunny day and look up. If you can see daylight through the roof decking, you have gaps that will become major leak points during any storm. Also look for dark stains, mold, or wet spots that indicate existing leaks you may not have noticed from inside your living space.
While you’re up there, check for sagging areas in the decking, which can indicate water damage or structural weakening. A roof with compromised decking has significantly less wind resistance than one with solid, dry plywood or OSB sheathing.
7. Verify Attic Ventilation Is Working Properly
Proper attic ventilation plays a surprising role in your roof’s ability to withstand severe weather. A well-ventilated attic equalizes air pressure between the inside and outside of your roof during rapid pressure drops associated with tornadoes and severe thunderstorms. Without adequate ventilation, the pressure differential can contribute to roof uplift.
Check that soffit vents are not blocked by insulation, that ridge vents or roof vents are clear and functional, and that bathroom and kitchen exhaust fans vent to the outside rather than into the attic space. Trapped moisture also weakens roof components over time, compounding the risk.
8. Inspect Pipe Boots and Roof Penetrations
Every pipe, vent, or other penetration through your roof is sealed with a rubber boot or flashing collar. These rubber boots deteriorate over time, cracking and splitting from UV exposure and temperature extremes. A failed pipe boot is essentially an open hole in your roof during a storm.
From the ground with binoculars, check the condition of every visible pipe boot. Cracked, split, or collapsed boots should be replaced before storm season. This is a quick, inexpensive repair that prevents significant water damage.
9. Evaluate Your Roof’s Age and Overall Condition
The age of your roof directly impacts its ability to survive severe weather. Most asphalt shingle roofs in Central Illinois last 20-25 years under normal conditions. If your roof is approaching or past the 15-year mark, its wind resistance has likely diminished significantly.
Signs of an aging roof include excessive granule loss (check your gutters for accumulation), widespread curling or cupping of shingles, and a generally weathered appearance. If your roof is nearing the end of its lifespan, replacing it before storm season is far more cost-effective than dealing with catastrophic failure during a tornado.
Pro tip: Shingles rated for 130+ mph wind resistance (Class H or Class F) are available for Central Illinois homes. If you’re replacing your roof before storm season, ask Campbell Construction about high-wind-rated shingle options that may also qualify for insurance discounts.
10. Secure or Remove Rooftop Accessories
Satellite dishes, antennas, solar panel mounts, and decorative elements on your roof can become dangerous projectiles in tornado-force winds. Check that all rooftop accessories are firmly anchored. If anything is loose, either secure it properly or remove it before storm season.
11. Trim Trees and Overhanging Branches
Overhanging tree branches are one of the leading causes of roof damage during severe storms in Central Illinois. Even branches that don’t directly overhang your roof can become projectiles when broken by high winds. The general rule is to maintain at least a 10-foot clearance between tree branches and your roof.
Focus on dead branches, limbs showing signs of disease, and any branches large enough to cause structural damage if they fell. For large trees close to your home, consider hiring a certified arborist for a health assessment. A dead or dying tree near your house is a ticking time bomb during tornado season.
12. Check and Reinforce Roof-to-Wall Connections
The connection between your roof structure and your walls is the most critical structural element during a tornado. In many older Central Illinois homes, the roof is attached to the walls with simple toenailed connections that can fail in winds as low as 80 mph. Hurricane clips or straps provide significantly more resistance.
While this inspection requires attic access and some construction knowledge, a qualified roofing contractor can evaluate your roof-to-wall connections and recommend upgrades if needed. This is one of the most impactful wind-resistance improvements you can make.
13. Inspect and Seal Around Windows and Doors in the Roof Line
Dormer windows, attic windows, and any doors or access points in the roof line should be checked for proper sealing. Worn weatherstripping, cracked caulk, and poorly sealed frames allow wind-driven rain inside during storms and can compromise the pressure balance of your attic space.
14. Document Your Roof’s Current Condition with Photos
This step is critical for insurance purposes. Before storm season, take detailed photos of every section of your roof from multiple angles. Include close-ups of shingles, flashing, gutters, soffits, and any recent repairs. Store these photos in cloud storage so they’re accessible even if your phone or computer is damaged.
Having “before” documentation makes the insurance claims process dramatically smoother. Without pre-storm photos, it can be difficult to prove that damage was caused by a specific storm event rather than pre-existing wear and tear. Your insurance adjuster will appreciate clear documentation, and it often results in faster claim approval and more accurate settlements.
15. Schedule a Professional Pre-Storm Inspection
While this DIY checklist covers a lot of ground, nothing replaces the trained eye of a professional roofing inspector. A qualified contractor can access the roof surface directly, use thermal imaging to detect hidden moisture, test structural connections, and identify issues that simply aren’t visible from the ground.
Campbell Construction offers comprehensive pre-storm roof inspections throughout our 14-county service area. We provide detailed written reports with photos, priority rankings for any needed repairs, and honest recommendations based on 25+ years of Central Illinois roofing experience.
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What to Do If Your Roof Was Already Weakened by Winter
Central Illinois winters are punishing on roofs. Ice dams, heavy snow loads, freeze-thaw cycling, and wind-driven sleet all take their toll. If your roof sustained any damage over the winter months, addressing it before tornado season isn’t optional. It’s urgent.
Common winter damage that must be repaired before storm season includes:
Ice dam damage: Water that backed up under shingles during winter may have compromised the underlayment and decking. Even if the leak appeared minor, the underlying damage could be extensive.
Snow load stress: Heavy, wet snow can stress roof trusses and rafters, creating structural weaknesses that tornado-force winds will exploit. Look for cracked or bowed framing members in the attic.
Wind damage from winter storms: High winds in January and February can loosen shingles and flashing without causing obvious visible damage. These loosened components become the first casualties of spring severe weather.
If you suspect any winter damage, schedule an emergency roof repair consultation immediately. Waiting until after a tornado hits to discover your roof was already compromised turns a repairable situation into a potential total loss.
How Professional Pre-Storm Inspections Save You Money
A professional pre-storm roof inspection typically costs a fraction of what a single insurance deductible would run you after storm damage. Here’s the math that makes the case:
The average Central Illinois homeowner’s insurance deductible for wind and hail damage ranges from $1,000 to $2,500. A professional pre-storm inspection with minor preventive repairs might cost $200-$500. But the real savings come from preventing the kind of cascading damage that turns a $5,000 repair into a $15,000-$25,000 full roof replacement.
When a tornado or severe thunderstorm hits a well-maintained roof, damage is typically limited to surface-level shingle loss that’s straightforward to repair. When the same storm hits a roof with pre-existing vulnerabilities, wind and water can penetrate to the decking, infiltrate the attic, damage insulation, cause mold growth, and compromise the structural integrity of the entire roof system.
Professional inspections also create documentation that strengthens your insurance claim if damage does occur. An inspection report showing your roof was in good condition before the storm eliminates any argument that the damage was pre-existing.
Insurance Documentation: Protecting Yourself Before the Storm
We cannot stress this enough: document your roof’s condition before tornado season starts. Homeowners who skip this step often face significantly more difficult insurance claims processes after storm damage.
Here’s your insurance documentation checklist:
Photograph every roof section from multiple angles, including close-ups of shingles, flashing, ridge caps, gutters, soffits, and fascia. Date-stamp your photos or take them with your phone’s location services enabled.
Keep receipts for all maintenance and repairs. If you had your roof repaired or maintained before storm season, save every receipt. This proves you were a responsible homeowner who took reasonable steps to maintain your property.
Review your insurance policy. Understand exactly what your policy covers for wind and tornado damage, what your deductible is, and whether you have any exclusions or limitations. Many homeowners discover gaps in coverage only after filing a claim.
Consider a professional inspection report. Having a licensed roofing contractor’s written assessment of your roof’s pre-storm condition carries significant weight with insurance adjusters. Campbell Construction provides detailed inspection reports designed specifically for insurance documentation.
Your Emergency Plan: What to Do When the Sirens Sound
Even the best-prepared roof can sustain damage in a direct tornado hit. Having an emergency plan in place before the season starts ensures you respond quickly and effectively to minimize both safety risks and property damage.
Before tornado season: Identify your safe room (interior room on the lowest floor, away from windows). Stock it with emergency supplies including water, flashlight, first aid kit, phone charger, and important documents. Know where your main water shutoff and electrical panel are located.
During a tornado warning: Get to your safe room immediately. Do not try to inspect your roof during the storm. Do not open windows (this is a myth). Stay away from exterior walls and rooms with large spans of ceiling.
Immediately after the storm: Once the all-clear is given, do a preliminary assessment from the ground only. Do not climb onto a storm-damaged roof. Look for obvious structural damage, fallen trees, and downed power lines. If you see significant damage, cover exposed areas with tarps if you can do so safely, and call your roofing contractor and insurance company immediately.
Why Local Matters: Campbell Construction’s Storm Response
When a tornado or severe storm hits Central Illinois, national roofing companies and out-of-state “storm chasers” flood into the area within days, going door-to-door soliciting business. While some are legitimate, many are fly-by-night operations that take deposits and disappear, perform substandard work, or inflate insurance claims fraudulently.
Campbell Construction has been headquartered at 1627 IL-78 in Jacksonville, Illinois since 2000. We’re not going anywhere. When we repair your roof, we stand behind it with warranties backed by a company that’s been here for over 25 years and will be here for the next 25.
Our 24-hour storm response covers 14 counties across Central Illinois, including Morgan County, Sangamon County, Springfield, and surrounding communities. When severe weather hits, our crews are mobilized and ready to respond with emergency tarping, temporary repairs, and full restoration services.
We work directly with your insurance company, provide detailed damage documentation, and handle the entire claims process so you can focus on your family’s safety and recovery. Licensed (#104.015328) and fully insured, Campbell Construction is the name Central Illinois homeowners have trusted for storm damage restoration for over two decades.
Storm damage? Call immediately. Campbell Construction provides 24-hour emergency storm response across 14 Central Illinois counties. Call (217) 271-1019 any time for emergency roof tarping and repairs. Learn more about our emergency services.
Your Tornado Season Roof Prep Timeline
Not sure when to tackle each item on the checklist? Here’s a recommended timeline for Central Illinois homeowners:
Late February – Early March: Schedule your professional pre-storm inspection. Contractors get booked up fast once the first warm spell hits. Clean gutters and downspouts. Trim overhanging tree branches.
Early – Mid March: Complete any repairs identified during inspection. Replace damaged shingles, flashing, and pipe boots. Repair soffit and fascia damage. Check attic ventilation.
Mid – Late March: Take comprehensive photos of your entire roof for insurance documentation. Review your homeowner’s insurance policy. Prepare your emergency plan and safe room supplies.
April – June (Ongoing): After each severe weather event, do a ground-level visual check of your roof. Report any damage immediately. Keep gutters clear throughout the season.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Get answers to the most common tornado season roof prep questions from Central Illinois homeowners.