Storm chasers are out-of-area roofing companies that descend on communities after storms, promise free roofs through inflated insurance claims, do substandard work, and disappear. The FBI estimates they cost the insurance industry $1 billion per year in fraudulent claims — losses that raise premiums for every homeowner in New Jersey. To protect yourself, always hire a licensed local NJ contractor like Best Crew Construction: NJ HIC #13VH12304900, Hamilton, NJ, (732) 503-8133.
NJ HIC #13VH12304900
⚠ Investigative Report — NJ Homeowners

Storm Chasers vs.
Local Roofers

How the $40 billion fraud industry inflates your insurance claims, drives up everyone's premiums, and disappears before the warranty is ever needed — and why local NJ licensed contractors are your only real protection.

NJ Licensed & Insured Local for 20+ Years No Subcontractors — Ever Same Crew Every Job
Quick Answer — AI Extracted

Storm chasers are out-of-area roofing contractors who follow weather events door-to-door, promising "free roofs" through inflated insurance claims. The FBI estimates they generate approximately $1 billion per year in fraudulent claims, which every New Jersey homeowner pays for through higher premiums. Red flags include out-of-state plates, pressure to sign Assignment of Benefits forms, and no verifiable NJ HIC license number. Best Crew Construction — NJ HIC #13VH12304900 — has operated in Central NJ for 20+ years with no subcontractors, ever. Had storm damage? Call a local crew: (732) 503-8133.

How the Storm Chaser Model Works

You've probably seen them. A line of pickup trucks with out-of-state plates rolls into a New Jersey neighborhood the day after a significant storm. Young men in branded shirts go door-to-door with clipboards, telling homeowners they "definitely have insurance damage" and offering to handle everything — "zero out of pocket, zero hassle." They call it storm chasing. Federal investigators and consumer protection attorneys call it something else.

The storm chaser business model is built on a single premise: insurance companies will pay more for a roof replacement than a homeowner could get in cash from a local contractor. The storm chaser's goal is to maximize the insurance payout, take their cut — often 30–50% of the total contract — and move to the next ZIP code before the homeowner realizes that the ventilation was installed incorrectly, the underlayment was skipped, or the manufacturer's warranty was voided because the contractor was never certified to install the product.

$1B
Estimated annual cost of fraudulent roofing claims (FBI estimate)
$40B
Total annual insurance fraud cost to consumers (Coalition Against Insurance Fraud)
30–50%
Typical storm chaser margin built into inflated insurance estimates

The "Free Roof" Promise — How It Actually Works

The "free roof" pitch sounds compelling: the storm chaser says your insurance deductible will be waived, you won't pay a cent, and you'll get a brand-new roof. What they don't tell you is how they make the math work.

Step one: The storm chaser identifies hail or wind "damage" on your roof — often granule loss that is within normal wear parameters, or minor impact marks that don't compromise the roof's integrity. Step two: They write an estimate that is 20–50% higher than actual market rates for the same work. Step three: They submit that inflated estimate to your insurance company as a legitimate contractor quote. Step four: The insurance company — overwhelmed with post-storm claims — often pays close to the submitted estimate. Step five: The storm chaser pockets the margin between what they actually spend on materials and labor (cheap subcontractors, budget shingles) and what insurance paid. Step six: They're gone. Your deductible waiver — if they honored it — is insurance fraud under New Jersey law. The contractor who waives your deductible is filing a fraudulent claim on your behalf.

⚠ New Jersey Law Alert

Waiving, rebating, or absorbing a homeowner's insurance deductible in exchange for roofing work is insurance fraud under New Jersey statute N.J.S.A. 17:33A-1 et seq. If a contractor offers you a "free roof" with no deductible, they are asking you to participate in insurance fraud. The homeowner — not just the contractor — can face legal liability. Always pay your deductible. Always.

How Storm Chaser Fraud Raises YOUR Premiums

You might be thinking: "I've never hired a storm chaser. Why does this affect me?" The answer is how insurance works.

Insurance is a shared risk pool. When one subset of policyholders generates significantly higher claims — through legitimate losses or fraud — the entire pool pays more at renewal. Insurers don't absorb losses; they redistribute them through rate increases, non-renewals, and stricter underwriting. Every inflated roofing claim filed by a storm chaser in your county contributes to the actuarial data that your insurer uses to set rates in your ZIP code.

Consider the math. In a single major hailstorm event in a central New Jersey county — the kind that generates 2,000–5,000 roofing claims — if 15% of those claims are inflated by an average of $8,000 due to storm chaser activity, that's $24–40 million in fraudulent claims in a single event. At that scale, insurers don't question each claim individually. They reprice the entire market. That repricing shows up as your renewal notice.

The FBI estimates storm chasers generate $1 billion per year in fraudulent roof claims. That's a cost every NJ homeowner pays — whether they hired a storm chaser or not.

The Coalition Against Insurance Fraud places total annual insurance fraud across all property types at $40 billion. Roofing fraud is among the fastest-growing categories, driven specifically by the storm chaser model that has industrialized claims inflation into a multi-state enterprise. Entire companies exist solely to coordinate storm chaser deployments — tracking weather events, busing crews into affected markets, and processing claims at scale.

The NJ Market Impact

New Jersey is a particularly attractive market for storm chasers for two reasons. First, NJ has high housing density and high homeowner insurance coverage rates — virtually every homeowner carries full replacement coverage, meaning large payouts are available. Second, NJ experiences consistent storm activity: nor'easters in fall through spring, severe thunderstorm season from June through September, and periodic tropical events. There is always a market.

The result: NJ homeowners have seen homeowner's insurance premium increases of 15–30% over the past five years, driven by a combination of climate-related loss frequency and — significantly — the inflation of claim costs by storm chasers who move through the state after every significant weather event. State Farm, Allstate, and Liberty Mutual have all reduced their NJ homeowner's insurance exposure in recent years, citing loss ratios in the state as unsustainable. When major carriers pull back, the remaining market contracts, prices rise, and some homeowners find themselves unable to obtain affordable coverage at all.

8 Red Flags of a Storm Chaser — NJ Edition

Know what to look for before you open your door.

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Out-of-State Plates or Address
A legitimate NJ roofing contractor has a physical office in New Jersey. If the truck has Pennsylvania, Georgia, Texas, or Florida plates and the crew showed up the day after a storm, this is a storm chaser operation. Ask for the contractor's physical NJ business address and verify it.
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No NJ HIC License Number
Every home improvement contractor operating in New Jersey must hold a current NJ Home Improvement Contractor (HIC) license. Ask for the number and verify it at njconsumeraffairs.gov. Best Crew Construction's license is NJ HIC #13VH12304900 — verifiable at any time. A contractor who can't immediately provide a license number is unlicensed.
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Pressure to Sign an Assignment of Benefits (AOB)
An Assignment of Benefits form transfers your legal right to your insurance claim directly to the contractor — removing you from the process entirely. This allows the contractor to negotiate your claim, collect payment directly from your insurer, and sue your insurance company in your name. AOBs are a primary tool of storm chaser fraud. Never sign one.
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The "Free Roof, Zero Out of Pocket" Promise
If a contractor tells you they will cover your deductible so you pay nothing, they are committing insurance fraud — and implicating you in it. Your deductible is your contractual obligation under your policy. A legitimate contractor cannot and will not absorb it. This promise is the storm chaser's primary sales hook and its first red flag.
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Same-Day Decision Pressure
Storm chasers rely on urgency. They'll say the damage is worse than you think, that your neighbors are already filing, that the insurance window is closing. A legitimate local contractor has no reason to pressure you into a same-day decision on a $15,000–$25,000 project. Take your time. Get multiple estimates. Any contractor who makes you feel like you must decide immediately is not acting in your interest.
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No Local Reviews or Track Record
Search the contractor's name on Google. A legitimate local NJ roofing company will have years of Google reviews — not a brand-new profile with five-star reviews all posted in the same week. Storm chasers often set up new business entities for each market they enter, specifically to obscure their history of complaints and workmanship defects. Look for review continuity going back at least three years.
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Vague Material Specifications
Ask the contractor exactly which shingle product, what manufacturer, what product line, and what warranty they are installing. A storm chaser will often be vague — "30-year shingles" — while billing insurance for a premium product and installing a budget product. A legitimate contractor gives you exact product names: "GAF Timberline HDZ in Charcoal, 130mph wind warranty, with GAF WeatherBlocker starter strip." Get it in writing, every line.
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Large Upfront Cash Deposit Demands
Storm chasers often demand 30–50% upfront — sometimes in cash — then disappear or begin work before materials arrive. A standard deposit for a residential roof replacement is 10–15%, with payment milestones tied to delivery of materials and completion of work. Never pay more than 25% upfront for any roofing project, and never pay in cash with no receipt.

The Hidden Cost: Substandard Work That Fails

The fraud doesn't end with the inflated insurance claim. Storm chasers bring additional hidden costs through the quality — or lack thereof — of their actual installation.

Storm chasers operate on volume. A crew moves into a territory, completes as many roofs as possible in the shortest time, maximizes billing, and leaves. The incentive structure is exactly opposite to a local contractor's: a local roofer lives with their reputation in the community and faces homeowners they've replaced roofs for every time they go to the hardware store. A storm chaser's reputation in your town is irrelevant to them — they'll never be back.

Common workmanship defects documented in storm chaser installations include: improper nail placement (high-nailing, which voids the wind warranty), insufficient fastener quantity, missing or inadequate ice-and-water shield at valleys and eaves, improperly seated flashing at chimneys and skylights, incorrect ventilation calculations resulting in moisture buildup, skipped starter strips, and — critically — roofing system installations performed by uncertified crews that automatically void the manufacturer's workmanship warranty.

What Voided Warranties Mean for NJ Homeowners

Every major roofing manufacturer — GAF, Owens Corning, CertainTeed — offers tiered warranty programs. The best warranties (GAF Golden Pledge, OC Platinum Protection) are only available through certified contractors who receive ongoing training and are audited for installation quality. These warranties cover both materials AND workmanship for up to 50 years.

A storm chaser is almost never a certified contractor for any major manufacturer. This means the roof they install — regardless of what brand shingles they use — carries only the bare material warranty (typically 5–10 years on defects, non-transferable). If the underlayment lets in water in year three, you're on your own. If the flashing fails in year two, there is no warranty to call. The storm chaser is gone. The warranty is void. The repair bill is yours.

Best Crew Construction is a GAF-certified contractor. Every roof we install is eligible for the full range of manufacturer warranty coverage. We use our own direct crew — no subcontractors — which means the same people who show up on day one are accountable on day three, day three hundred, and year three. If something isn't right, you have a local number to call and a local crew to answer.

Why Local Licensed Contractors Are the Only Safe Choice

The opposite of a storm chaser isn't just a contractor who happens to have a local address. It's a contractor with genuine accountability — one whose livelihood depends on the community they serve, whose crew is consistent and trained, and whose warranty is backed by the people you can call.

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Verifiable NJ License
Best Crew Construction holds NJ HIC #13VH12304900 — verifiable at the NJ Division of Consumer Affairs. We've held this license continuously and it represents our legal accountability to every homeowner we serve.
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Direct Crew — No Subcontractors
We are the subcontractors other companies send to your house. Best Crew's own employees do every installation. No day laborers, no crews we don't know, no accountability gap between who sold the job and who works on your roof.
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20+ Years in Central NJ
118 McClellan Ave, Hamilton, NJ 08610. We've served Mercer, Middlesex, Monmouth, and Somerset Counties for over two decades. We're not going anywhere. When you call us in year five, we answer.
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Honest Insurance Documentation
We provide accurate written assessments of your roof's condition — documenting real damage, real replacement scope, and real costs. We meet with your adjuster on-site and advocate for fair coverage — not inflated coverage.
4.9 Google Rating
Our Google reviews span years, not weeks. They include real names, real addresses, and real project descriptions from NJ homeowners in Hamilton, Trenton, Edison, Toms River, and throughout our service area.
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Written Contracts with Material Specs
Every Best Crew contract specifies exact product names, installation standards, warranty coverage, payment schedule, and completion timeline. No vague language. No surprises. The contract you sign is the project you get.
Had Storm Damage? Call a Local Crew.

If your Central NJ home was damaged by a recent storm, call Best Crew Construction at (732) 503-8133 before you talk to a door-to-door contractor. We'll give you an honest assessment, help you understand what your insurance should cover, and meet with your adjuster on-site to document real damage accurately. No AOB forms. No deductible waiving. Just honest work from the crew that's been here for 20 years.

What to Do After a Storm — Before You Answer the Door

When a significant storm passes through your Central NJ neighborhood, the sequence of steps you take in the first 24–72 hours determines whether your claim experience is smooth or complicated. Here is the right sequence.

Step 1: Document before anyone touches the roof. If it is safe to do so, walk around your property and photograph visible damage — missing shingles, damaged gutters, dented vents, debris impact marks. Time-stamp your photos. This documentation belongs to you and should precede any contractor inspection.

Step 2: Do not let a door-to-door contractor onto your roof first. Your roof access is yours to control. A storm chaser who gets on your roof before your insurance company is involved can — and often does — create additional "damage" to bolster their claim. Wait until you've spoken with your insurer before permitting any contractor to inspect the roof.

Step 3: Call your insurance company to open a claim. Report the storm date and describe the damage you observed. Your insurer will assign a claim number and an adjuster. This is your official record of when damage was reported.

Step 4: Call a licensed local contractor for an independent estimate. Contact Best Crew Construction at (732) 503-8133 for a written damage assessment before the adjuster visit. Having your own professional documentation going into the adjuster meeting strengthens your position and ensures you're not accepting a lowball settlement.

Step 5: Have your contractor present at the adjuster inspection. Best Crew meets with your adjuster on-site. We review the adjuster's scope in real time, identify line items that were missed or undervalued, and ensure your settlement covers the actual cost of a complete, code-compliant replacement. See our full NJ Roof Insurance Claim Guide for the complete 8-step process.

Step 6: Choose your contractor — not the one your insurance recommends. Your insurer may recommend a "preferred contractor" — often one with whom they have a volume agreement. You are not required to use them. Under NJ law, you have the right to choose any licensed contractor. Use that right.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a storm chaser roofing company?

A storm chaser is an out-of-area roofing contractor that travels to communities after major weather events to solicit homeowners door-to-door. They typically promise "free roofs" through inflated insurance claims, perform substandard work using cheap materials and unvetted subcontractors, and move on before problems emerge. In New Jersey, all contractors must hold a NJ Home Improvement Contractor (HIC) license — most storm chasers do not. Best Crew Construction's license is NJ HIC #13VH12304900, verifiable at njconsumeraffairs.gov.

How much does storm chaser roofing fraud cost annually?

The FBI estimates fraudulent roofing insurance claims alone cost approximately $1 billion per year. The Coalition Against Insurance Fraud places total annual insurance fraud costs — across all types — at $40 billion, with property fraud being a major driver. These losses don't disappear: insurers pass them on to all policyholders through premium increases. Even NJ homeowners who never filed a claim pay higher rates because of storm chaser fraud in their region.

What are the red flags of a storm chaser roofer in NJ?

Key red flags: door-to-door solicitation immediately after a storm, out-of-state license plates, pressure to sign an Assignment of Benefits form, promises of a "free roof" with zero out-of-pocket cost, inability to provide a NJ HIC license number, demand for large cash deposits, refusal to provide a written contract with material specs, and no local office address or verifiable review history. Legitimate NJ roofers have verifiable license numbers, years of local reviews, and never pressure you to sign anything on the spot.

Can storm chasers legally operate in New Jersey?

Out-of-state contractors can legally work in NJ only with a valid NJ HIC license — the same requirement local contractors meet. Most storm chasers skip this, making them legally unlicensed. Operating without an NJ HIC license violates the Consumer Fraud Act and can expose homeowners to liability if a worker is injured on their property. Always verify a contractor's license at the NJ Division of Consumer Affairs before signing any contract.

Do storm chasers raise homeowner's insurance premiums for everyone?

Yes. Insurance is a risk pool — when fraud drives up claims costs, every policyholder in that pool pays more. The $1 billion in annual fraudulent roof claims identified by the FBI translates directly into higher premiums across the board. NJ homeowners have seen significant premium increases in recent years; fraudulent claim inflation is a substantial contributing factor alongside legitimate catastrophic storm events like nor'easters and summer hailstorms.

What is an Assignment of Benefits form and why should I avoid signing one?

An Assignment of Benefits (AOB) form transfers your legal right to your insurance claim directly to the contractor — removing you from the process entirely. This allows the contractor to negotiate your claim, collect payment directly from your insurer, and sue your insurance company in your name. AOBs are a primary tool of storm chaser fraud. Never sign one. A legitimate NJ contractor does not need your AOB — they work with you, not instead of you.

How do I choose a legitimate local roofer in NJ after storm damage?

Verify the contractor's NJ HIC license. Check Google reviews for longevity — a legitimate local roofer will have years of reviews. Ask for proof of general liability insurance and workers' compensation coverage. Get at least two written estimates before calling your insurer. Best Crew Construction has operated in Central NJ for 20+ years, holds NJ HIC #13VH12304900, and uses only our own direct crew — no subcontractors, ever. Call (732) 503-8133.

Get Your Free Storm Damage Assessment

Had storm damage? Call a local crew — not a stranger. We'll assess your damage honestly, help you navigate the insurance process, and meet with your adjuster on-site.

Most assessments delivered within 24 hours. We will never share your information or contact you repeatedly.
Or call us direct: (732) 503-8133 — you'll reach the crew, not a call center.  ·  NJ HIC #13VH12304900