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Should I open or buy a Storm Guard Roofing franchise in 2027?

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Direct Answer

Yes — if you have $250K liquid, $500K net worth, prior sales or construction-management experience, live in a hail/wind-prone metro, and treat storm-restoration as a sales business rather than a roofing business. Storm Guard Roofing & Construction's 2025 FDD reports a $65,000 franchise fee, total initial investment of $209,300–$247,600 (Item 7), and Item 19 average franchisee gross sales of approximately $2.56M with top-quartile units above $4M.

Realistic Year-1 cash flow runs $90K–$180K after royalties and owner-draw at sub-scale revenue near $900K–$1.4M, with breakeven in months 14–22 for capable operators in active storm corridors. Probably not if you want a passive investment, lack restoration-sales chops, or sit outside the hail belt.

The Real Numbers

Storm Guard Roofing & Construction is an exterior-restoration franchise specializing in insurance-driven storm-damage roofing, siding, and gutter replacement. Founded in 2003 and franchising since 2012, the system reports approximately 40 operating territories across the U.S.

As of the 2025 FDD (covering fiscal year 2024). Unlike retail roofing, roughly 70–80% of Storm Guard revenue ties to insurance claims, which compresses customer-acquisition cost but requires aggressive canvassing after named storm events.

The economics live and die on storm frequency, claim-approval velocity, and crew throughput. Here is the locked 2027 cost-and-revenue stack based on the most recent FDD plus current 2026 disclosures and a conservative outlook for 2027 territories.

Line Item2027 RangeSource
Initial franchise fee$65,000 (single territory)2025 FDD Item 5
Real estate / build-out (office)$5,000–$12,0002025 FDD Item 7
Vehicles (1 wrapped truck)$8,000–$15,000 (lease deposit)2025 FDD Item 7
Equipment, ladders, software$9,500–$14,0002025 FDD Item 7
Insurance (GL + WC + auto)$7,500–$12,0002025 FDD Item 7
Training travel & lodging$3,500–$6,5002025 FDD Item 7
Initial marketing (90 days)$25,000–$35,0002025 FDD Item 7
Additional funds (3 months)$80,000–$95,0002025 FDD Item 7
Total investment (Item 7)$209,300–$247,6002025 FDD Item 7
Royalty (tiered)6.25% to $4M; 5% to $7M; 4% to $10M; 3% over2025 FDD Item 6
Brand fund / marketing fee0.75% of gross weekly + local minimums2025 FDD Item 6
Local-marketing minimum spend$2,500/mo Yr1, $5,000/mo Yr2, $7,500/mo Yr3+2025 FDD Item 6
Average gross sales (Item 19)~$2.56M (FY2024)2025 FDD Item 19
Top-quartile gross sales$4.0M–$6.5M2025 FDD Item 19
Bottom-quartile gross sales$650K–$1.1M2025 FDD Item 19
EBITDA margin (mature unit)12–18%Franchise Chatter 2025; IBISWorld 23816
Owner W-2 + distribution (Yr 2+)$140K–$320KValidation calls; FDD Item 19
BreakevenMonth 14–22Validation calls; Vetted Biz
Liquid capital required$75,000 minimumFranchisor disclosure
Net worth required$250,000 minimumFranchisor disclosure

Royalty math matters. On a $2.56M unit, Storm Guard royalty is $160,000/year (6.25%) plus $19,200 brand-fund (0.75%) plus ~$60,000 local marketing minimumroughly $239,000 in franchisor-tied spend on top of cost-of-sales. Storm Guard cost-of-sales (materials + crew + subcontractors) commonly runs 62–68% of revenue, leaving operating expenses + owner pay from the remaining 14–22 points.

For comparison, independent IBISWorld 23816 (Roofing Contractors) reports average operating margins of 6.5–9.2% — the franchise insurance-restoration model carries higher gross because insurance-billed claims invoice at retail "RCV" instead of cash-job pricing.

flowchart TD A[Storm Event Hits Territory] --> B[Door-to-Door Canvass + Inspections] B --> C[Free Inspection Report + Damage Documentation] C --> D{Damage > Deductible?} D -->|Yes| E[Customer Files Insurance Claim] D -->|No| F[Retail Cash Quote or Drop] E --> G[Adjuster Meeting + Xactimate Scope] G --> H[Supplement Negotiation 30-90 days] H --> I[Production Schedule] I --> J[Roof Install 1-2 days] J --> K[Invoice to Insurer at RCV] K --> L[Revenue Recognized + Royalty Paid] F --> I

Who Wins With This Business

Storm Guard rewards a specific operator profile. Sales-DNA owners win first — people who have carried a quota, run a B2C sales team, or come out of insurance, mortgage, or solar door-knocking. Storm-restoration roofing is 80% claim-conversion craft, 20% roofing trade.

Winners hire two to four W-2 canvassers within 60 days of opening, build a 2–3-person inside claims-support team by month 9, and subcontract 100% of installation labor to vetted crews paid per-square.

Geographic winners cluster in the hail-and-wind belt: Dallas-Fort Worth, Oklahoma City, Tulsa, Kansas City, Denver, Colorado Springs, Omaha, Des Moines, Minneapolis-St. Paul, Birmingham, Huntsville, Little Rock, Nashville, Memphis, and the I-35 corridor. NOAA storm-event-database hail days map almost perfectly to Storm Guard's high-performer list.

Coastal hurricane markets (Tampa, Houston, Charleston, Wilmington) also work but face higher insurance-carrier friction post-2023 reform.

Operators with restoration general-contracting licenses, prior Xactimate certification, or HAAG inspector credentials accelerate. Capital winners bring $250K–$400K liquid so they can float supplement receivables for 60–120 days without panic — Storm Guard cash-conversion-cycle averages 74 days from claim to insurer payment.

Who Loses With This Business

Absentee owners lose. This is not a semi-passive franchise — owner participation through year two is non-negotiable. Pure construction operators lose when they treat claims like contracting bids and skip the adjuster-relationship and supplement work that drive the 30–40% of revenue hidden in scope expansion.

Sub-scale territories lose. A Storm Guard owner doing $650K–$900K still pays the $2,500–$7,500/month local-marketing minimum, the 6.25% royalty, and the 0.75% brand fundroughly $90,000–$110,000 in fixed franchisor costs that collapse owner take-home below $50,000.

Anything under $1.1M annual revenue is a treadmill.

No-storm years destroy weak balance sheets. 2019 and 2021 hail seasons were down 35% nationally vs. The 2018/2020 averages. Owners with no roofing-trade experience and no claim-supplement training lose the negotiation step — leaving 15–25% of revenue on the table every job.

Wrong-state operators lose. California, New York, and Oregon carry heavy contractor-licensing burdens and lower hail frequency, which hurts Storm Guard unit economics.

2027 Market Conditions

The U.S. Roofing-contractor market is projected at $59–62 billion for 2027, with the residential segment alone forecast at $15.2 billion (Freedonia). Replacement work represents 79.2% of installations because insurance carriers have shortened acceptable roof ages to 15–20 years, accelerating policy non-renewals and forced replacements.

2024–2025 severe convective storms generated more than $15 billion in roof-related claims across Texas, Oklahoma, Colorado, Iowa, and Kansas — the core Storm Guard footprint. NOAA's 2027 hail outlook continues the elevated La Niña-tilted pattern for the southern Plains and Mid-South.

Insurance-side headwinds are real. Texas (HB 1183), Florida (SB 76 + SB 2A), and Louisiana have all tightened roof-claim windows, eliminated assignment-of-benefits in several states, and expanded carrier subrogation rights. Public-adjuster restrictions and "matching-clause" disputes now resolve 30–60 days slower than 2022, lengthening cash-conversion-cycles.

Consolidation is accelerating. Private-equity rollups (Renovo Home Partners, Apex Service Partners, Triton Atlantic) bought 70+ regional roofers in 2024–2025, squeezing labor costs. Storm Guard's franchise model competes on brand, supplement expertise, and centralized adjuster training.

AI tools are mainstreaming. HOVER, EagleView Assess, and CompanyCam now anchor 55%+ of Storm Guard inspections, cutting measurement-to-quote time from 48 hours to 30 minutes.

flowchart LR A[Days 1-30 Discovery] --> B[Days 31-60 FDD Review + Validation] B --> C[Days 61-90 Territory + Financing] A1[Pull NOAA Hail Data] --> A A2[Drive 3 Top Storm Guard Markets] --> A B1[Call 12+ Existing Franchisees] --> B B2[Verify Item 19 with 3 Owners] --> B B3[SBA Loan Pre-Qual] --> B C1[Territory Map + Population] --> C C2[Signed Lease + Insurance] --> C C3[Hire First Canvasser] --> C C --> D[Sign FA + Wire Fee]

The 90-Day Decision Tree

  1. Days 1–10: Pull the storm data yourself. Download NOAA SPC hail and wind reports for 2018–2026 for every metro you'd consider. Reject any territory averaging fewer than 3 hail days per year of 1"+. Storm Guard's own internal heat-map is helpful but NOAA is the unbiased ground truth.
  2. Days 11–20: Request the full 2026 FDD. Read Items 5, 6, 7, 19, 20, and 21. Pay special attention to Item 20 turnoverfranchisees who exit at year 3–5 are the single best predictor of system health.
  3. Days 21–35: Validation calls. Speak to a minimum of 12 current franchisees and 3 former franchisees. Ask: (a) what did Year-1 actually cost vs. Item 7?, (b) what's your true cash-conversion-cycle?, (c) what's your supplement-capture rate on claims?, (d) would you do it again?.
  4. Days 36–50: Financing. Storm Guard appears on the SBA Franchise Directory, so SBA 7(a) loans up to $5M are accessible. Target a 70/30 debt-equity split with $75K–$100K reserved as post-launch working capital.
  5. Days 51–65: Territory analysis. Confirm 100,000+ owner-occupied single-family homes in your protected territory. Run Esri Tapestry and county-assessor data to confirm median home value $250K+ (lower-value markets cap claim sizes).
  6. Days 66–80: Discovery Day. Visit Storm Guard headquarters in Minneapolis. Spend a half-day with the claims/supplement training team — that team is the moat.
  7. Days 81–90: Sign or walk. Wire the $65K fee only after legal review of the FA, a signed personal-guarantee acknowledgement, and a written 12-month operating budget you can defend to your spouse and your banker.

Alternative Plays

FAQ

How much can I realistically make in Year 1?

Year-1 revenue for new Storm Guard franchisees ranges $400K–$1.4M, with median first-year owner take-home of $35K–$95K after paying yourself a draw, covering local-marketing minimums, and servicing debt. Top first-year performers in active hail markets (DFW, OKC, KC) clear $1.8M and pay themselves $150K+.

Anyone projecting $200K+ owner pay in Year 1 is being sold a fantasyplan for Year 2 to be when the math works.

How long is the franchise agreement and what are renewal terms?

The Storm Guard franchise agreement runs 10 years with two 5-year renewal options at the then-current royalty and fee structure. Renewal fees historically run $10,000–$15,000. Item 20 turnover has hovered around 8–12% annually — **slightly elevated vs.

Mature franchise systems but typical for storm-restoration concepts**.

Do I need roofing experience to qualify?

No — and Storm Guard explicitly prefers sales, insurance, or general-management backgrounds over roofing-trade backgrounds. The 6-week training program in Minneapolis covers Xactimate, adjuster negotiation, canvassing, and crew management. Roofing-trade owners often struggle to delegate installation and over-index on margin per job instead of volume.

What's the real cash-conversion-cycle on an insurance claim?

Average days from signed contract to insurer payment is 60–90 days, with supplement work pushing some claims to 120–180 days. You float crew payments at net-15 while waiting on RCV checks, so working capital of $150K–$250K is realistic for a unit doing $1.5M+ revenue.

What happens in a no-storm year?

Storm Guard owners diversify with retail roofing, gutters, siding, and exterior painting to smooth revenue across slow seasons. The strongest operators also travel-team into neighboring states after major hail events under Storm Guard's mutual-aid agreementa Tulsa franchisee may send a sales crew to Lubbock for a 6-week storm response and split revenue with the territory owner.

Bottom Line

Storm Guard Roofing & Construction is a legitimate path to a $2M–$5M business if you are a sales operator in a hail-belt metro with $250K liquid and the stomach for 70-hour weeks through year two. The $65K franchise fee, $209K–$248K total investment, 6.25% royalty, and 0.75% brand fund are fair for the brand lift, Xactimate training, and supplement-claim playbook you receive.

Average Item 19 gross sales of $2.56M proves the model works at scale, but the bottom-quartile floor of $650K–$1.1M proves it punishes anyone who treats it as a roofing business instead of an insurance-sales business.

Buy it if you'll canvass storms personally for 18 months, live in the hail belt, and have $400K+ in total liquidity. Skip it if you want passive income, lack restoration-sales experience, or sit in a no-storm metro. Better alternative for trade-skilled operators: build independent and sell into a PE rollup at 4–6x EBITDA in years 5–7.

Sources

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