Storm Damage Restoration in Colorado Springs, CO

Hail, Wind, Flash Floods, and Monsoon Damage Cleaned Up Fast

Colorado Springs is one of the most storm-punished cities along the Front Range. Severe hailstorms roll through the Pikes Peak region multiple times every summer, often sending golf ball-size hail across neighborhoods from Northgate to Banning Lewis Ranch. Monsoon thunderstorms build fast and drop heavy rain on foothills communities that drain quickly into yards, basements, and streets. The legacy burn scars from the 2012 Waldo Canyon and 2013 Black Forest fires mean that even moderate rainfall can produce flash flooding in areas that many homeowners do not think of as flood-prone. Anatom Restoration provides 24/7 storm damage restoration throughout Colorado Springs and the surrounding Pikes Peak region. When a storm hits, call (720) 356-0945 and we will have a crew on the way.
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Pikes Peak Storm Patterns and the Damage They Leave Behind

Severe storms in Colorado Springs cause damage in several distinct ways, and each one creates a different set of restoration needs. Hail is the most widespread cause of property damage in the region. Large hailstones crack and displace asphalt shingles, dent metal roof panels, break skylights, punch holes in screens and gutters, and can directly impact siding. A roof that takes a significant hail hit may not leak immediately, but the damaged shingles lose their granule coating and begin allowing water intrusion within weeks or months. By the time a homeowner notices a ceiling stain, the damage has usually been spreading through the attic insulation for some time. High winds, which often accompany hailstorms and can reach 70 miles per hour or more during severe cells, peel back roof sections, blow off ridge caps, and can bring tree limbs down onto roofs in neighborhoods with mature trees like Old North End, Patty Jewett, and Broadmoor. Flash flooding from monsoon storms affects neighborhoods near drainage channels and washes. Neighborhoods like Powers Corridor, Cimarron Hills, and areas near Monument Creek can take surface flooding during intense events. The burn-scar factor compounds this significantly for foothills communities. Mountain Shadows and Rockrimmon sit within or adjacent to the Waldo Canyon burn area, and intense rainfall there produces debris-laden runoff that flows downhill faster than pre-fire conditions. Homes that have no flood history can take on water during these events.

Colorado Springs Storm Response: Stabilization, Drying, and Full Rebuild

When we receive a storm damage call, our priority is emergency stabilization. If the storm is ongoing or if there are active water intrusion points, we deploy tarping and temporary board-up as needed to stop further water from entering the structure. We then conduct a full interior and exterior damage assessment, identifying all areas where water has entered or is at risk of entering. Inside, we use thermal imaging and moisture meters to trace how far water has traveled from entry points. We extract standing water, remove saturated materials, and set up commercial drying equipment throughout affected areas. For debris removal, we clear any mud, sediment, or physical debris from storm flooding. We photograph and document all damage in detail, which provides accurate documentation that you can share with your insurance company when you report the event. We can also coordinate directly with your insurance adjuster if you would like us to. After stabilization and drying are complete, we move into permanent repairs including drywall, flooring, trim, insulation, and paint. We coordinate with roofing and siding contractors as needed for the exterior components of the loss.

Storm Season in Colorado Springs: What Homeowners Should Know

The Colorado Springs storm season peaks from May through September, with the most active hail months being June and July. The monsoon pattern establishes itself in mid-July and brings daily afternoon and evening thunderstorms through September, particularly over and east of the mountains. Storms in the Pikes Peak region can be fast-moving and intense. It is common for a storm to hit Briargate and Flying Horse in the north and then impact Banning Lewis Ranch and the Powers Corridor 30 minutes later as it tracks east. This means that a neighborhood like Wolf Ranch may be under a clear sky when a neighbor in Stetson Hills is watching hail fall. If your home took storm damage, a few things will help before we arrive: take photos of visible damage from a safe location, do not walk on damaged roofs, and move belongings out of any area where water is actively entering. If you have roof tarps from a previous storm or a hardware store, placing them over obvious openings can help slow water intrusion until we get there. For anything more substantial, just call (720) 356-0945 and let us take it from there. We are set up to handle exactly this kind of emergency.
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Storm Damage Restoration FAQs

We serve all Colorado Springs ZIP codes for storm damage restoration: 80903, 80904, 80905, 80906, 80907, 80909, 80910, 80911, 80915, 80916, 80917, 80918, 80919, 80920, 80921, 80922, 80923, 80924, 80925, 80926, 80927, and 80951. We also serve surrounding communities, including Falcon (80831), Monument (80132), Woodland Park (80863), Fountain (80817), Black Forest (80908), Peyton (80831), Cimarron Hills, and Manitou Springs (80829).
All Colorado Springs neighborhoods are at risk from hail during summer storm season. Foothills-adjacent neighborhoods like Broadmoor, Skyway, Mountain Shadows, Rockrimmon, and Manitou Springs are most exposed to flash flooding and runoff. Communities near the Waldo Canyon and Black Forest burn scars face elevated flood and debris flow risk. The north and east communities, including Briargate, Wolf Ranch, Stetson Hills, and Banning Lewis Ranch, are frequently in the path of high-intensity cells tracking off the mountains eastward.
Most standard homeowners insurance policies cover hail damage in Colorado Springs. The Pikes Peak region is one of the most hail-active areas in the country, which is why Colorado Springs has high homeowners insurance premiums and why claims volume in the city is significant after major storm events. Coverage typically applies to the roof, structure, and interior water damage resulting from the storm breach. Actual cash value versus replacement cost value is an important policy distinction that affects how much you receive. We provide thorough documentation of all storm-related damage so you have what you need to present to your insurer.
Call as soon as the storm passes and it is safe to do so. The longer water sits inside a structure, the more damage it causes. Even if the storm happened at night, calling first thing in the morning is better than waiting days. If there is active water intrusion through a damaged roof or wall, we can deploy emergency tarping within hours to stop more water from entering while we assess and plan the full repair.
Standard homeowners insurance does not cover flooding from external water sources, including burn-scar runoff. This type of flooding, where water enters from the ground surface or an overflowing drainage channel, requires separate flood insurance. However, if the storm also damaged your roof and rain came in through that breach, the roof-related water damage may be covered under your homeowners policy. We document the distinct sources of water intrusion clearly so your insurer can evaluate each component appropriately.
Emergency tarping involves securing heavy-duty waterproof tarps over damaged roof areas or openings in the building envelope to stop water from entering until permanent repairs can be made. You need it any time a storm has created an opening in your roof, wall, or windows that will be exposed to additional rain before a contractor can make permanent repairs. We deploy emergency tarps as part of our storm damage response and can also provide board-up for broken windows and doors.
Emergency stabilization and tarping typically happen within hours of a call. Drying of water-affected interior areas takes three to seven days for most residential losses. Reconstruction, including drywall, insulation, flooring, and paint, adds additional time depending on scope. Full project timelines range from one week for a single-room event to four to six weeks for a multi-room loss involving significant structural damage. We give you a detailed timeline estimate once we have assessed the full damage.
Yes. After major hail events that affect multiple neighborhoods simultaneously, we prioritize calls in the order received and scale up our crew as needed. We recommend calling immediately after the storm rather than waiting, as demand for restoration and roofing services rises sharply after large events. The sooner we can tarp and document your property, the better your outcome is likely to be.
If it is safe to do so, use your phone to photograph visible exterior damage from the ground, any interior water intrusion, damaged contents, and any pre-existing conditions you are aware of. This helps establish a clear before-and-after record. Do not put yourself in danger to photograph roof damage. We conduct our own thorough documentation when we arrive, including moisture readings and thermal imaging, which adds to what you have already captured.
Yes. Anatom Restoration serves Fountain (80817) and Security-Widefield (80911, 80915) and regularly helps military families in those communities after storm events. We understand the housing management requirements that can come with military housing and can work with on-post property managers or your unit housing office if needed. Call (720) 356-0945 for immediate assistance.

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Locations We Serve

80904 80905 80906 80907 80909 80910 80911 80915
80916 80917 80918 80919 80920 80921 80922 80923
80924 80925 80926 80927 80951 80831 80132 80863
80817 80908 80831 80915 80922 80829 80133

Primary Areas We Serve

Downtown Colorado Springs Westside / Old Colorado City Southwest Colorado Springs Broadmoor / Southwest Central-North Colorado Springs Central-East Colorado Springs Southeast Colorado Springs Security-Widefield Area
East Colorado Springs Southeast Colorado Springs Northeast Colorado Springs North-Central Colorado Springs Northwest Colorado Springs Briargate Northgate / Interquest Powers Corridor
Northeast Colorado Springs Wolf Ranch / North Powers Southeast El Paso County South Colorado Springs Banning Lewis Ranch Northeast Colorado Springs Falcon Monument
Woodland Park Fountain Black Forest Peyton Cimarron Hills Manitou Springs Palmer Lake