Welcome to ICC

For 35 years, we've helped Georgetown and Georgetown County property owners recover from hurricane damage. From historic waterfront properties to coastal homes, we understand Georgetown's unique river flooding and storm surge challenges. We handle the insurance process so you can focus on your family and rebuilding.

Ready to talk? Click the ICC logo below to connect with us, or call (864) 497-2151.

Georgetown Hurricane Resources

Georgetown County Emergency Management
129 Screven Street, Georgetown, SC 29440
Phone: (843) 545-3273 | Emergency: 911
georgetowncountysc.org/emergency-management

American Red Cross - South Carolina Chapter
Phone: (800) 733-2767
redcross.org/sc

National Weather Service - Wilmington
Phone: (910) 762-4289
weather.gov/ilm

FEMA Disaster Assistance
Phone: (800) 621-3362
fema.gov/disaster/recover

National Flood Insurance Program
Phone: (877) 336-2627
floodsmart.gov

Trusted Georgetown Restoration Companies:

  • ServiceMaster Restore: (843) 546-4100
  • Paul Davis Restoration of Myrtle Beach: (843) 360-4052
  • SERVPRO of Georgetown/Horry/Brunswick Counties: (843) 236-6278
  • Roto-Rooter Plumbing & Water Cleanup: (843) 546-7323
  • Advanced Restoration: (843) 237-5954

Hurricane Damage Insurance Claims Guide for Georgetown

Why Hurricane Claims Are Complex in Georgetown

Georgetown's location at the confluence of multiple rivers creates extraordinary hurricane vulnerability. The historic port city sits where the Sampit, Black, Pee Dee, and Waccamaw rivers meet before flowing to Winyah Bay and the Atlantic. This geography means hurricane storm surge combines with river flooding to impact properties from multiple directions.

Historic downtown Georgetown properties face similar challenges to other South Carolina historic communities—buildings dating to colonial times require specialized restoration that adjusters routinely undervalue. River flooding combined with tidal surge creates complex attribution questions about whether damage resulted from storm surge, river overflow, or wind-driven rain.

On Georgetown waterfront properties, Georgetown's percentage-based hurricane deductibles create significant out-of-pocket costs. A typical 5% deductible on a $500,000 home means $25,000 you pay before insurance covers anything. Combined with separate flood insurance deductibles and coordination-of-benefits disputes, property owners often face substantial coverage gaps.

Georgetown County flood plain regulations have evolved significantly over recent decades. Properties built decades ago don't meet current elevation and flood-proofing requirements. After major hurricane damage, bringing properties into compliance with current standards adds substantial costs insurers try to exclude.

How Hurricane Claims Get Denied in Georgetown

Insurance companies use specific tactics to minimize Georgetown hurricane claims. Understanding these strategies protects your settlement:

Wind versus flood attribution manipulation: When storm surge and wind damage occur simultaneously, insurers try to classify all water damage as "flood" to shift claims away from homeowners coverage. This leaves you dependent on flood insurance with lower limits. They claim water entered through doors before wind damaged the roof—even without evidence supporting this timeline.

River flooding attribution manipulation: Georgetown faces both ocean storm surge through Winyah Bay and river flooding from multiple waterways. Insurers exploit this complexity, claiming all flooding is "riverine flooding" not covered, or that river flood damage is separate from hurricane damage. This allows them to deny claims even when hurricane-driven storm surge caused the flooding.

Inadequate damage assessment: Adjusters document obvious damage but miss hidden water intrusion in wall cavities, compromised electrical systems, foundation issues, and secondary damage. When problems appear weeks or months later, insurers claim it's a "new loss" not covered by your hurricane claim.

Building code exclusions: Georgetown County requires specific hurricane-rated materials and methods. Insurers offer repairs using "like kind and quality"—old code standards—leaving you unable to get permits. They claim code upgrades aren't covered, forcing you to pay thousands for legally required improvements.

Delay tactics and inadequate settlements: After major hurricanes, insurers slow-walk inspections, request endless documentation, and require multiple re-inspections. They know exhausted property owners often accept inadequate settlements to avoid prolonged disputes. Quick initial offers are typically 40-60% of actual repair costs.

Mold exclusion manipulation: South Carolina's climate means mold appears within 48 hours in damaged structures. If adjusters don't visit immediately, they photograph mold and claim it resulted from "failure to mitigate," excluding coverage. This ignores that post-hurricane conditions—no power, no access, no contractors—make immediate mitigation impossible.

What Hurricane Insurance Should Cover in Georgetown

Understanding your coverage prevents surprises when filing Georgetown hurricane claims:

Dwelling and structural repairs: Complete repair or replacement of hurricane-damaged structure—roof systems, walls, windows, doors, framing. This includes materials and labor to restore to pre-loss condition using current building codes, not patch repairs or outdated methods.

Building code upgrade costs: Ordinance or law coverage pays increased costs to bring repairs up to current Georgetown County building codes. This includes hurricane-rated roofing, impact windows, structural attachments, and elevation requirements that exceed your original construction standards.

Water damage and mold remediation: Comprehensive water damage repair including structural drying, affected material removal, and mold remediation when hurricane water intrusion causes contamination. Proper remediation includes air quality testing, containment, treatment, and verification—not just surface cleaning.

Contents and personal property: Everything inside your property—furniture, appliances, electronics, clothing. Verify whether replacement cost or actual cash value applies. Actual cash value deducts depreciation, often leaving you with 50-60% of replacement costs.

Additional Living Expenses: If hurricane damage forces you from your home, ALE covers hotel costs, meals, and increased living expenses during repairs. Coverage continues until repairs are complete or policy limits exhaust—understand your specific limits and time restrictions.

Historic waterfront property restoration: Georgetown's waterfront historic district requires repairs meeting both preservation standards and current flood plain regulations. This dual compliance adds costs beyond standard historic restoration—coverage should include both preservation requirements and flood compliance upgrades.

Documenting Hurricane Damage in Georgetown

Proper documentation makes the difference between full recovery and inadequate settlements:

Before hurricane season: Create complete visual inventory of your property. Video walk-throughs work better than photos—narrate what you're showing and pan slowly through each room. Document high-value items separately with model numbers, serial numbers, and purchase information. Store in cloud storage accessible after evacuation.

When a hurricane threatens: Take fresh photos and video the day before evacuation. Focus on areas vulnerable to wind and water—exterior walls, roof condition, windows, doors. Document your hurricane preparation—boarding windows, securing outdoor items, moving valuables to upper floors. These preparations may be reimbursable and show you took reasonable protective measures.

After the hurricane: Wait for official all-clear from Georgetown County Emergency Management before returning. Photograph all damage immediately before any cleanup beyond emergency protection. Document the damage sequence if possible—wind damage before water intrusion establishes causation for attribution purposes.

Photograph water sources and patterns: Water lines on walls show flood height and help establish whether water came from storm surge (ground level up) or roof damage (ceiling down). This attribution determines which insurance policy applies and can mean tens of thousands in coverage differences.

Document neighborhood context: Photograph surrounding properties showing similar damage patterns. If widespread wind damage exists before flooding, this establishes wind as the primary cause. Insurance companies can't claim your property uniquely failed if all surrounding properties show identical damage.

Start detailed written log immediately: Record date, time, observations, people you spoke with, instructions received, actions taken, money spent. This contemporaneous record becomes critical evidence if your claim is disputed. Note when you reported the claim and any adjuster visit dates.

Understanding Wind vs. Flood in Georgetown

Georgetown experiences flooding from ocean storm surge pushing up Winyah Bay, river flooding from upstream, and tidal surge in creeks and waterways. Multiple simultaneous flood sources create complex attribution requiring careful documentation of water entry points and timing.

Wind damage (homeowners insurance): Hurricane winds damage roofs, break windows, compromise structural elements. Water entering through wind-created openings is wind damage, not flood—this distinction determines coverage. Wind-driven rain penetrating through intact openings due to wind pressure is also wind damage, not flood.

Flood damage (requires separate NFIP flood insurance): Storm surge, rising water from rivers or storm drains, ground saturation causing water to enter from below. Flood insurance covers building and contents separately—you need both for complete protection. Standard homeowners policies exclude flood damage regardless of cause.

Documentation establishes causation: Photos showing wind damage before water intrusion prove causal sequence. Water lines on walls showing flood height versus ceiling damage patterns establish which source caused which damage. Your documentation must clearly show what occurred and in what sequence to protect your coverage rights.

Preparing for Hurricane Season in Georgetown

Hurricane preparation prevents both physical damage and insurance disputes:

Review insurance coverage annually: Verify you have both homeowners and flood insurance. Confirm dwelling coverage reflects current replacement costs—construction costs in Georgetown have increased dramatically. Underinsurance means you pay the difference between actual costs and your coverage limit.

Understand your hurricane deductible: Calculate the actual dollar amount you'll pay. Percentage-based deductibles on valuable properties mean substantial out-of-pocket costs before insurance pays anything. Know this number before the hurricane hits to avoid surprises.

Document property thoroughly: Complete photo and video documentation of your property inside and out. Store in cloud storage accessible after evacuation. Maintain records of significant purchases, improvements, and maintenance work.

Understand evacuation procedures: Know your evacuation zone and what it means. Register for Georgetown County emergency alerts. Plan multiple evacuation routes and destinations before hurricane threats arrive. Don't wait until evacuation orders to figure out where you're going.

Protect your property: Install hurricane shutters or prepare plywood panels before season starts. Trim trees and remove dead branches. Secure outdoor furniture and equipment. Know how to shut off utilities if needed.

Prepare important documents: Keep insurance policies, property deeds, financial records in waterproof containers or scan to cloud storage. You'll need these documents accessible during evacuation and claims filing.

Getting Help with Your Georgetown Hurricane Claim

Georgetown hurricane claims involve complex coverage questions, attribution disputes, and insurer tactics designed to minimize settlements. Property owners need representation that understands these specific challenges.

Insurance Claims Consultants has worked South Carolina hurricane claims for 35 years. We've helped property owners recover over $18.7 million in 2024 alone through expert claim negotiation and documentation. We know how insurers handle Georgetown claims because we've fought these battles hundreds of times.

We work on contingency, earning a percentage only when you receive your settlement. No upfront costs, no hourly fees, no surprise bills. This aligns our interests with yours—we maximize your settlement because that's how we get paid.

The sooner you involve us, the better we protect your claim. Claims built correctly from the start settle faster and for substantially more than claims requiring rebuilding after initial denial. Call us at (864) 497-2151) for a free consultation. We'll review your policies, discuss your specific situation, and explain exactly how we can help maximize your hurricane claim recovery.

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If you live in SC or GA and if your home is Totaled by fire, the insurance company BY LAW owes you policy limits… If your house is in South Carolina, and your house totaled by fire, you can read the law here. South Carolina Code of Laws The adjuster is not doing you a favor by writing policy limit check after a Total he is required by law. On he other hand YOU (the insured) has to prove your Contents.