If a recent storm rolled through Nashville, we'll have a licensed inspector at your door as soon as today with a clear, photo-documented report of exactly what the hail and wind did to your roof.
Thanks — a 615 Roofing inspector will reach out shortly to confirm your appointment. Storm damage worsens fast, so we'll move quickly. Need us now? Call (615) 218-3395.
Our storm tracking logged 1 confirmed hail area around Nashville, with the most recent event in the last few weeks producing hail up to 1" across the area. Hail this size routinely bruises shingles and knocks loose the granules that protect them — damage that is rarely visible from the ground.
Get my roof checkedDavidson County's terrain runs from the low ground along the Cumberland River out to the ridgelines around Forest Hills and Green Hills, so no two Nashville neighborhoods weather a storm the same way. The housing stock is unusually mixed — pre-war brick bungalows and Tudors in Belle Meade and Sylvan Park sit alongside the tall, steep-gabled new-builds that filled in East Nashville and 12 South over the last decade. Older homes here often still wear 3-tab asphalt that's well past its prime, while the infill builds carry architectural shingles that hail can still bruise badly.
Storms tend to ride the Cumberland River corridor and the I-40 and I-24 splits, which is why a single cell can clip Inglewood and Hillsboro Village in the same afternoon while leaving Bellevue untouched. We map damage neighborhood by neighborhood rather than assuming the whole city took the same hit. The trouble with storm damage is that most of it isn't visible from the ground — hail bruises the protective granules off asphalt shingles and wind lifts and creases them, quietly shortening a roof's life and opening the door to leaks months later. On the steep, multi-facet roofs common in Nashville's newer infill, wind tends to attack the exposed gable ends and the valleys, while the broad low-slope rear additions on older bungalows are where we find the slow leaks.
Our crews work across all of Nashville and Davidson County, including Green Hills, Belle Meade, Sylvan Park, East Nashville, 12 South, Inglewood, Hillsboro Village, and Forest Hills. With confirmed hail logged around Nashville this storm season, we're often already inspecting roofs in your neighborhood after a storm moves through.
We're a local Middle Tennessee crew that knows how storms actually behave over Davidson County — not a storm-chasing out-of-state outfit that disappears after the season. Because we track storm activity across Davidson County ourselves, we know which Nashville streets just took a hit and can get to them fast. We give you an honest, photo-documented report of exactly what we find, with no pressure and no obligation. If your roof is fine, we'll tell you. If it's not, you'll have the documentation you need to make a smart decision.
One important note: 615 Roofing performs roof inspections and repairs, and we're glad to help you understand and navigate the insurance process. We document the condition of your roof clearly and honestly and explain your options — we just don't negotiate or adjust the claim for you, so you always stay in control of your own claim.
Homeowners across Nashville call us for a focused set of storm-response services, all built around honest documentation rather than high-pressure sales:
Storm damage doesn't wait, and neither do we. From request to roof in three quick steps.
Fill out the quick form or call us directly. It takes under a minute, and there's zero obligation.
A licensed local inspector heads to your Nashville home, often the same or next day, to check for hail and wind damage.
We walk you through exactly what we found with photos and honest, straightforward next steps — no pressure.
Common questions from Nashville and Davidson County homeowners.