Sonoma County homeowners navigate a specific set of weather challenges that shape how roofs are damaged and how repairs should be approached. From the powerful atmospheric river storms that pound the county each winter to the occasional surprise hail event and the relentless coastal wind that affects western communities year-round, understanding your local storm environment is the foundation of good roof stewardship.

Sonoma County Storm Patterns

Atmospheric River Events (Primary Storm Threat)

Sonoma County's dominant storm threat is atmospheric river events — narrow corridors of concentrated moisture stretching thousands of miles across the Pacific that make landfall in Northern California during fall and winter months. A single atmospheric river event can deliver 3–8 inches of rainfall in 24–48 hours, with sustained winds of 30–50 mph and gusts reaching 60–80 mph at exposed ridge and hilltop locations. The back-to-back nature of atmospheric river sequences in wet years — 2017, 2023, and 2025 being notable examples — means that roofs may be subjected to multiple severe events before any repair is possible.

Localized Wind Events

Beyond atmospheric river storms, Sonoma County experiences localized wind events driven by pressure differentials between the coast and interior valleys. Diablo wind conditions in fall months bring dry, hot, easterly winds with gusts exceeding 60 mph in elevated areas — these events are the primary wildfire driver but also cause shingle and flashing damage on exposed homes. Gap winds through coastal passes around Bodega Bay and Jenner can reach 50+ mph with little advance warning.

Hail Events

True hail damage is less common in Sonoma County than in the Central Valley or Sierra foothills, but it does occur — typically during intense thunderstorm cells that occasionally develop within atmospheric river systems in late winter and spring. When hail does occur, impact damage to asphalt shingles may not be immediately visible but can fracture the granule-fiberglass bond and accelerate aging significantly.

Common Storm Damage Types

Damage TypeCauseVisibilityUrgency
Missing/blown-off shinglesWind upliftVisible from groundEmergency — immediate water exposure
Lifted or creased shinglesWind, inadequate fasteningRequires roof accessHigh — will fail in next event
Damaged ridge capsWind, age + windOften visible from groundHigh — central leak pathway
Flashing failuresWind, water infiltrationRequires inspectionHigh — primary leak source
Gutter damage/detachmentWind, debris, ice/rain loadVisible from groundMedium — drainage failure
Branch/tree impactFallen trees or limbsUsually visibleEmergency if deck penetration
Granule loss (hail)Hail impactRequires inspection or gutter checkMedium — accelerates aging

Post-Storm Inspection Checklist

After any significant storm event, complete this checklist before contacting your insurer:

  1. Ground-level exterior survey: Walk the full perimeter of your home looking for visible shingle damage, displaced ridge caps, hanging gutters, and debris on the roof surface.
  2. Gutter check: Examine gutters for detachment, overflow marks, and an unusual amount of granules — granule accumulation in gutters after a storm can indicate shingle impact damage even when surface damage isn't obvious.
  3. Attic inspection: Check your attic for daylight (indicating deck penetration), moisture on rafters or sheathing, and dampness in insulation.
  4. Ceiling inspection: Walk through your home checking ceilings and upper walls for new staining, bubbling paint, or damp spots.
  5. Photograph everything: Date-stamped photos of all findings, both exterior and interior, create the evidentiary record your insurance claim requires.

Emergency vs. Non-Emergency Situations

Not all storm damage requires the same response speed. Call for emergency service when:

Schedule a standard inspection appointment (non-emergency) when:

Insurance Claim Tips for NorCal Storms

After major regional storm events, Sonoma County homeowners should file insurance claims and contact contractors as quickly as possible. Both insurance adjusters and roofing contractors are in high demand following countywide events, and early action significantly shortens the timeline to permanent repair. Document all damage before any emergency mitigation (tarping) is performed — this pre-mitigation documentation is required by most insurers. Keep all receipts for emergency materials, as these are typically reimbursable.

For storm damage response anywhere in Sonoma County, call Sutter Roofing at (707) 829-5050. Our emergency repair service covers all areas of the county, and our inspection service provides the written documentation your insurance claim needs.