Aerial measurement report

What is an aerial roof measurement report?

A roof measurement built from aerial or drone imagery — squares, pitch, ridges, and valleys — without climbing for tape measurements.

Definition

An aerial measurement report uses satellite, airplane, or drone imagery to produce an accurate diagram of a roof: total squares, pitch, ridge and hip lengths, valleys, and edge footage. Providers like EagleView and others generate them on demand.

For storm work, these reports speed up estimating and supplementing. Precise ridge and valley footage backs up line items like ridge cap and drip edge, and an accurate square count keeps the scope honest.

They don’t replace getting on the roof to document damage, but they save time and cut down on measurement disputes. The numbers are consistent and easy to attach to a claim.

Build estimates from accurate measurements

Put the playbook to work

HailMate reads the scope, flags the line items carriers leave off, and tracks every claim to the final depreciation check.

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