How percentage wind/hail deductibles work in AL, TN and GA, when they trigger, how much they cost, and how to compare them across carriers.
Look at your declarations page for a line labeled “Windstorm or Hail Deductible” or “Named Storm Deductible.” It is often shown as a percentage with the calculated dollar amount beside it. If you only see one flat deductible, your policy may not separate wind/hail — confirm with your agent.
You can sometimes buy back a lower wind/hail deductible for a higher premium, or offset it with mitigation credits — a FORTIFIED roof, impact-resistant shingles, or wind-mitigation features can lower both the rate and, with some carriers, the deductible. Compare carriers, because the trade-off differs widely.
TCDS Insurance Agency is an independent agency based in Pinson, Alabama, serving Alabama, Georgia and Tennessee. We compare 50+ carriers so you can match coverage to your real risk. Get a free, no-obligation quote or call us to review your policy.
Across Alabama, Tennessee and Georgia, insurers increasingly apply a separate percentage deductible for wind and hail losses — distinct from the flat deductible on everything else. On a coastal or high-hail home this can be 1% to 5% (or more) of the dwelling limit, which on a $300,000 home means $3,000 to $15,000 out of pocket before coverage applies (source: Insurance Information Institute).
These deductibles are driven by each carrier's catastrophe modeling, not by a single state rule. Two homes on the same street can carry different wind/hail deductibles with different insurers, which is why comparing the deductible — not just the premium — matters.
| Wind/hail deductibles by state (general patterns) | Detail |
|---|---|
| Alabama | Percentage wind/hail common statewide; highest near the Gulf Coast. |
| Tennessee | Percentage hail deductibles common in the hail-prone middle/east of the state. |
| Georgia | Percentage wind/hail common; coastal and metro-Atlanta hail zones see higher %. |
| Typical range | 1%–5% of dwelling (Coverage A) limit, set per carrier. |
| Trigger | Applies only to named wind/hail losses, not all-other-perils claims. |
Patterns per Insurance Information Institute, Alabama Dept. of Insurance, Georgia Office of Insurance and Tennessee Dept. of Commerce & Insurance. Your exact deductible is on your declarations page and varies by carrier.
See the full Alabama insurance guide.
Part of: Home Insurance
Insurers in storm-prone states use a percentage wind/hail deductible to share catastrophe risk with policyholders. It applies only to wind and hail losses and is usually larger than your flat all-other-perils deductible.
It's 2% of your dwelling (Coverage A) limit. On a home insured for $300,000 that's $6,000 out of pocket before wind or hail coverage pays. The percentage and the dwelling limit, not your home's market value, set the figure.
Sometimes. Some carriers let you buy back a lower percentage for more premium, and mitigation features like a FORTIFIED roof or impact-resistant shingles can earn credits. Because carriers price this very differently, comparing several is the best way to manage it.
Yes. Percentage wind/hail deductibles are common across Alabama, Tennessee and Georgia, with the highest percentages near the Gulf Coast and in high-hail metro areas. The exact figure is set per carrier and shown on your declarations page.