Loading...
Loading...
Emergency roof tarping is the most time-critical make-safe action you can take after storm damage exposes your roof. When tiles are displaced, sarking is torn, or a section of roofing is damaged or missing, every hour of exposure allows rain to penetrate the building structure — saturating insulation, wetting ceiling plasterboard, and driving moisture into wall framing. What starts as a roof repair quickly becomes a full internal restoration job.
Roof tarping involves securing heavy-duty poly tarps — minimum 150 gsm — over the damaged roof sections using timber battens, screws, or weighted edge anchors. The tarp is tensioned to shed water and resist wind uplift until a licensed roofer can make permanent repairs. In cases of significant structural damage or tree-fall, temporary timber framing may be installed beneath the tarp to support it against wind loads.
Non-certified emergency responders frequently cause additional damage — wrong tarp gauge, insufficient anchoring, and unsafe roof access are the most common issues. IICRC-certified contractors carry the right equipment and follow a make-safe protocol that protects both the property and the claim.
Under most Australian home insurance policies, policyholders have a duty to mitigate further damage after an insured event. This is not optional — it is a policy obligation, and failure to fulfil it can reduce your claim entitlement for damage that could reasonably have been prevented.
The practical application of this duty in storm damage situations is straightforward: if your roof is damaged and you do not arrange emergency tarping, and subsequent rain then saturates your ceiling, insulation, walls, and flooring — your insurer may accept the original storm damage but reduce or deny the secondary water damage on the basis that you failed to mitigate.
If you receive any pushback from your insurer about emergency make-safe costs, refer them to the duty to mitigate provisions in your Product Disclosure Statement and the General Insurance Code of Practice. If the dispute is not resolved internally, escalate to AFCA.
Emergency roof tarping is the first step in a structured recovery process, not the end point. Once the property is made safe, the focus shifts to scope assessment, claim lodgement, and permanent repair.
Payment plans are available through Equipped Commercial Finance to help manage costs while you await your insurance outcome.
When and how emergency board-up is used alongside roof tarping.
What storm damage restoration costs in Australia — by damage type.
Your rights when an insurer denies or reduces a claim — and how to respond.
The full scope of services available through the Disaster Recovery platform.
Get connected with IICRC certified contractors in your area
Get Emergency Help Now