Which valley, roof plane, or missing gutter run creates the most visible water problem?
What to Check After a North Texas Storm Hits Your Gutters
After heavy wind and rain, a quick gutter check can reveal loose sections, blocked downspouts, roof debris, guard problems, and discharge points that need attention before the next storm.
What to check before requesting help
After heavy wind and rain, a quick gutter check can reveal loose sections, blocked downspouts, roof debris, guard problems, and discharge points that need attention before the next storm.
- Walk the home after rain and note overflow marks, mulch washout, gutter sagging, and where downspouts released water.
- Check valleys and guards for stuck debris that can turn into repeat overflow.
- Use photos of the problem areas when requesting repair, guards, or installation help.
Turn a vague quote request into a cleaner gutter plan.
Use this planner to frame the request around North Texas storm gutter maintenance guide. The more clearly the water path is explained, the easier it is for a provider to compare installation, guard, repair, and drainage options.
Where can the downspout send water without flooding the slab, walkway, patio, or landscape bed?
Does the project need new seamless gutters, guards, repair, larger downspouts, or drainage extensions?
Start with the water problem, not a sales pitch
Share the roofline, overflow point, missing gutter runs, and drainage concern. A cleaner request helps a provider understand what needs to be checked first.