Houston Home Insurance
Your insurer is reading your home from the sky, and your trees are part of what it sees.
After a Houston storm season, plenty of homeowners are surprised to get a letter saying their policy will not renew unless they trim a tree, even though no inspector ever knocked on the door. An inspector did come, it just came from the sky. Carriers now read your home from above, and what they see in your yard is one half of what I call the Tree Test, one of the five frameworks on our guide to what carriers are quietly changing.
Mature trees are part of why an established Houston home feels like home. The point is not to make the yard sterile. The point is to keep the tree from becoming the reason a retiree, a widow, or a longtime homeowner gets a renewal letter they did not see coming.
This is not a reason to panic. It is a reason to know what the photos look for and to get ahead of it, so a beautiful tree does not cost you your coverage.
Why does my insurer want me to trim my tree?
Because an aerial photo flagged branches hanging over or too close to your roof. Carriers now inspect homes with satellite, aircraft, and drone imagery at renewal, and models often flag vegetation near the roofline. They may ask you to trim within a set correction window or risk non-renewal.
This is the aerial half of the Tree Test, what the photos see in your yard. The decision it leaves you is to trim and document proactively, and to push back if the image used against you is outdated or wrong.
Insurers in Texas now use satellites, aircraft, and drones to inspect homes at renewal, and a computer model reads the images before a person ever does. The model looks for overhanging or touching tree branches, missing or curling shingles, moss or algae growth, ponding water, and debris, and it also notes features like pools and trampolines that affect liability. Overhanging limbs are a frequent flag, because they can damage shingles and drop debris onto the roof.
When the model flags your home, the carrier may send a non-renewal notice or a demand to trim or repair within a set correction window, and many homeowners never knew the inspection happened. The one piece of good news in Texas is that insurers must now disclose the specific reason for a non-renewal, so you can see exactly what was flagged.
The fixes are mostly simple yard work done before renewal season. Trim branches back from the roofline, clean your gutters, clear off any moss or algae, and keep your roof in good shape. It cuts both ways too, since a clean roofline and a newer roof read as lower risk in the same images and can support a better underwriting conversation.
Just as important, keep proof. Dated photos or a professional roof inspection on file are what let you respond when an aerial image is outdated or the software simply misreads your roof. Homeowners do successfully challenge these, and in Texas your right to the specific non-renewal reason gives you a place to start.
Seeing your trees from above is only one half of the Tree Test. The other is what happens when a tree actually falls, and in particular whose tree it was and whether it was provably dead, which decides who pays. If a neighbor's tree has you worried, that is covered in our guide on who pays when a neighbor's tree falls on your house.
Because we shop the 50+ top Texas carriers we know well, we can tell you what is likely to flag at renewal, help you respond to a notice with documentation, and find a carrier that fits your home as it actually is. About 40 percent of the time we tell a family their setup is already sound and to leave it alone. The full set of frameworks is on our contract guide.
Yes. Texas insurers now routinely use satellite, aircraft, and drone imagery to inspect homes at renewal, often without the homeowner knowing. Computer models scan the photos for things like overhanging branches, missing shingles, and roof staining, and the carrier can decide not to renew based on what it sees. It has become a common part of how policies are reviewed.
Because an aerial photo flagged branches hanging over or too close to your roof. Models often flag vegetation near the roofline, since overhanging limbs can damage shingles and drop debris. Carriers may ask you to trim them back within a set correction window or risk non-renewal.
Unfortunately, yes. Homeowners have lost coverage after aerial inspections flagged overhanging trees, a worn roof, or roof staining, even with no claims history. The good news in Texas is that insurers must now disclose the specific reason for a non-renewal, so you can see what was flagged and address it or shop for a better fit.
Mostly roof and yard condition. The models look for overhanging or touching tree branches, missing or curling shingles, moss or algae growth, ponding water, and debris, and they also note features like pools and trampolines that affect liability. A clean, well maintained roofline reads as lower risk and can support a better underwriting conversation.
Be proactive before renewal season. Trim branches back from the roofline, clean your gutters, clear off moss or algae, and keep dated photos or a roof inspection on file. If your roof is sound, that documentation is what lets you push back when an aerial image is outdated or simply wrong.
Often, yes. Aerial images are sometimes outdated or misread by the software, and homeowners have successfully disputed them with current photos or a professional roof inspection. In Texas you can ask for the specific non-renewal reason, and we can help you respond with documentation or find a carrier that fits your home as it actually is.
Send us your renewal and we will tell you what is likely to draw a flag, help you respond to any notice with the right documentation, and find a carrier that fits your home as it actually is. If your coverage is already solid, we will say so.
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