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Storm Chasers vs Local Roofers in Woodbury: Why Local Always Wins

14 Minute

Updated: 05.01.26

Three days after Sept 21, 2025, our phones at Owl started ringing differently. Homeowners in Woodbury were calling about door-knockers — out-of-state plates, reflective vests, “free roof inspection!” pamphlets, contracts thrust in front of them in their driveways. We’d seen it before; we’ll see it again. They’re called storm chasers, and they hit Minneapolis-St. Paul hard after every major storm.

Here’s the honest breakdown of what storm chasers are, why they’re so common, what’s wrong with hiring one, and how to spot a real local Woodbury roofer in a sea of out-of-state opportunists.

What is a storm chaser, exactly?

A storm chaser is a roofing contractor who follows severe weather events from city to city. They:

  • Run sales crews that show up door-to-door immediately after a storm
  • Use high-pressure tactics to get homeowners to sign contracts on the spot
  • Often subcontract the actual roofing work to local crews
  • Disappear from the area within a few months of the storm
  • Aren’t licensed in Minnesota long-term and aren’t reachable when problems arise

They’re not all illegal. Some are technically licensed. But the operating model — fly in, sell hard, leave — is structurally bad for homeowners.

How storm chasers find Woodbury

Storm chaser companies use the same tools roofing companies use to identify storm-impacted areas: NWS storm reports, hail tracking radar, news coverage. After Sept 21, every major hail-tracking firm published Woodbury maps. The chasers loaded their RVs, booked weekly hotel rates, and rolled in.

You can usually spot the operations:

  • Out-of-state plates clustered at a hotel parking lot for weeks
  • Door-to-door teams of 6-10 reps working a neighborhood
  • Lawn signs popping up for unfamiliar company names
  • Pop-up “office” addresses that are mailbox stores or co-working spaces
  • Aggressive Facebook and Google ads with stock storm imagery

Why storm chasers are bad for Woodbury homeowners

Concern Storm chaser Local Woodbury roofer (Owl)
Where they live Out of state, temporary lodging Twin Cities-based, year-round
MN GC license Sometimes; varies by company Yes — Owl licensed under § 326B.805
Workmanship warranty support Hard to reach later Direct line to ownership
Insurance claim experience High volume, low quality Detailed scope work, supplementals included
Material brand availability Whatever is fastest to ship Stocked with multiple manufacturers
Permit pulling Often skipped Always pulled with city of Woodbury
Customer reviews (verifiable) Often shallow / generic / paid Real Google + BBB reviews from real Woodbury homeowners
Year 5 of warranty Company likely gone Same family, same phone number

The chaser model is volume-first. The local model is reputation-first. Choose accordingly.

The contract trap

One of the most common chaser tactics is the “contingency agreement.” It’s framed as harmless: “Sign this so I can get on your roof and inspect for insurance.” But what you sign is often a binding contract that:

  • Authorizes the chaser to negotiate directly with your insurance company
  • Locks you into using them as the contractor if any claim is approved
  • Includes a “liquidated damages” clause if you cancel — typically 10-30% of the project value
  • Sometimes assigns insurance proceeds directly to the chaser, not you

Read every word before you sign anything. Better: don’t sign anything in your driveway. Get a copy of the document, take it inside, sleep on it, have someone review it.

Minnesota law gives you a 3-business-day right to rescind certain home solicitation contracts under the Home Solicitation Sales Act. Use it if you signed under pressure.

Storm chaser red flags

  1. Out-of-state license plates on the company truck
  2. “Sign today or this offer expires” pressure
  3. “We’ll waive your deductible” — illegal under Minn. Stat. § 325E.66
  4. No physical Twin Cities office you can drive to
  5. No verifiable Minnesota GC license number
  6. Unfamiliar company name with no Google review history before this storm
  7. “Free upgrades” that sound too good (Class 4 shingles for free, decking included regardless)
  8. Aggressive door-knocking technique — won’t take no
  9. Pamphlets without contact info beyond a phone number
  10. “We’re already working on three of your neighbors’ roofs” — social proof tactic

Two or more red flags in one interaction = walk away. No exceptions.

How to verify a Minnesota roofer

Quick verification steps that take less than 10 minutes:

  1. Look up the MN residential contractor license on the MN Dept of Labor & Industry license search. License must be active.
  2. Check Google reviews. How many? How old is the oldest? Are there local Woodbury reviewers? Generic 5-star reviews from out of state are a warning.
  3. Check the BBB profile. Years in business, complaints, response patterns.
  4. Verify the physical address. Drive past it or look it up on Google Maps satellite view. Co-working / mailbox stores are warning signs.
  5. Check Facebook page age and post history. A real local company has years of mundane Facebook posts, not just storm-period ads.
  6. Ask for a Minnesota lien-waiver process explanation. Real contractors know how mechanics liens and waivers work in this state.
  7. Ask for a Woodbury reference. Past customer near you who can vouch.

“Noah is the real deal. After our insurance denied our roof claim and the first roofer walked away, Noah showed up the next day and said he thought he could get us a new roof. He came through. I call him The Roof Whisperer.”
— Tyler Moberg, Woodbury homeowner (Google review)

What about national companies that have local offices?

Not all out-of-area companies are chasers. Some larger national roofing companies have legitimate Minnesota operations with permanent offices, employed crews, and real local presence. Distinguishing them:

  • Have a multi-year operating history in Minnesota (verify Secretary of State registration)
  • Have a physical office you can visit, not a virtual address
  • Have employed local installers, not transient crews
  • Have local Minnesota Google reviews going back years
  • Pull permits regularly with city offices

National companies with real local presence aren’t the problem. The problem is operations that fly in, sell, and leave.

Why we’re not anti-competition — we’re anti-bad outcomes

To be clear: there are great Twin Cities roofers besides Owl. Many of them are competing for the same Sept 21 claims and doing right by Woodbury homeowners. We’ve worked alongside good local competitors for years. The market for good roofing in the east metro is plenty big.

What we’re against is the structural model where someone who isn’t accountable to this community shows up after a storm, takes money out of homeowner pockets, and disappears. That’s not competition — that’s extraction. We’ll lose business to a good local competitor any day. We won’t watch a homeowner get burned by a chaser without saying something.

What if you already signed with a chaser?

  1. Check the date. If it’s within 3 business days, you have rescission rights. Send a written cancellation letter, certified mail.
  2. Read the contract carefully. Look for cancellation terms, liquidated damages clauses, and assignment language.
  3. Document any pressure tactics used to get you to sign. They may be relevant to invalidating the contract.
  4. Consult an attorney if the contract is binding and you want out. Many Minnesota attorneys handle these situations.
  5. File a complaint with the MN Department of Commerce or the Attorney General’s office if patterns of fraud are present.

How to introduce a real local roofer when one shows up at your door

Even local Woodbury roofers occasionally door-knock — it’s a legitimate sales channel post-storm. The difference is in tone and content. Real local reps:

  • Identify themselves and their company clearly
  • Take “no” for an answer
  • Offer to leave a card and follow up by phone
  • Don’t ask you to sign anything in your driveway
  • Mention local references and license numbers without being asked

If a rep at your door does those things, they’re probably real. If they push, pressure, or pull out a contract — close the door.

Other Owl posts on protecting yourself

What Woodbury homeowners say about Owl

★★★★★

“Worked with Noah and it was a great experience. He was very responsive to any questions I had. Good team did a great job getting the roof replaced. For smaller things Noah went above and beyond.”

— John Wharton, via Google

★★★★★

“Noah did an excellent job with our roof and windows, and the entire experience was straightforward from the beginning. He communicated clearly, showed attention to detail, and delivered high-quality work. His team was efficient and professional throughout.”

— Brian Edge, via Google

★★★★★

“Noah is the real deal. After our insurance denied our roof claim and the first roofer walked away, Noah showed up the next day and said he thought he could get us a new roof. He came through. I call him The Roof Whisperer.”

— Tyler Moberg, via Google

All reviews verified from Owl Roofing’s public review profiles. See more at our reviews page.

Frequently asked questions

How can I tell a storm chaser from a real local Woodbury roofer?
Out-of-state plates, no physical Twin Cities office, deductible-waiver offers, sign-now pressure, and unfamiliar company names that just appeared after Sept 21. Real local roofers have years of Minnesota Google reviews, a verifiable license, and a permanent address.
Is it illegal for out-of-state companies to roof in Minnesota?
No, but they need a Minnesota residential contractor license under § 326B.805 to do most residential work over $15,000. Many chasers operate without one or use a sponsoring local license they aren’t really part of.
What if a chaser pressures me to sign in my driveway?
Don’t sign. Take their materials inside. Look them up online. If you do sign and regret it, Minnesota’s Home Solicitation Sales Act gives you 3 business days to rescind in writing on most home-sold contracts.
Are all ‘free inspection’ offers a trap?
No — most legitimate Minnesota roofers (including Owl) offer free inspections. The trap isn’t the inspection; it’s what you’re asked to sign. A real free inspection comes with no contractual strings; a chaser inspection often comes with a contingency agreement attached.
Can a chaser do a quality roof?
Sometimes. The work is often subcontracted to local crews who may do good work — or not. The bigger issue is what happens 2-5 years later when the roof has an issue and the company isn’t reachable. The roof itself can be fine; the warranty often isn’t.
What should I do if I think a chaser scammed someone in Woodbury?
File a complaint with the MN Department of Commerce and the Minnesota Attorney General’s office. Both offices track patterns of post-storm fraud and can take action when complaints accumulate.

A Woodbury-based roofer your grandkids could call

Family-owned, year-round east metro operation. We answer the phone in year 25 the same way we answer it now. Free inspection, no driveway contracts. Call (651) 977-6027 or request below.

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About the author

Noah Bergland is the co-founder of Owl Roofing, a family-owned roofing company serving Woodbury and the east Twin Cities metro. A University of Minnesota marketing grad, Noah holds a Minnesota General Contractor license and passed the state Qualified Builder exam. He has personally managed more than 350 exterior projects since 2020 — roofs, siding, windows — and writes about roofing the same way he runs Owl: calm, honest, and no-pressure.

Noah on LinkedIn · Work with Owl

Written By: Noah Bergland

Noah Bergland is the co-founder of Owl Roofing, a family-owned roofing company serving Woodbury and the east Twin Cities metro. A University of Minnesota marketing grad, Noah holds a Minnesota General Contractor license and passed the state Qualified Builder exam. He has personally managed more than 350 exterior projects since 2020 — roofs, siding, windows — and writes about roofing the same way he runs Owl: calm, honest, and no-pressure.