Tree damage in Knoxville TN โ€” filing insurance claims for tree removal

When a tree damages your Knoxville home, your insurance claim hinges on a few specific factors. Most homeowners get this wrong on their first call โ€” and end up either paying out of pocket for things insurance would have covered, or fighting their carrier for months over things that wouldn't have been covered anyway. Here's the actual playbook.

The 5-Minute Coverage Cheat Sheet

ScenarioTypically Covered?
Tree falls on your house during a stormโœ… Yes โ€” structure + removal
Tree falls on your detached garage, shed, or fenceโœ… Yes โ€” usually covered
Tree falls on your vehicleโœ… Yes (comprehensive auto policy)
Tree falls in your yard, no structures damagedโš ๏ธ Limited ($500-$1,000 sub-limit common)
Healthy tree blocks your drivewayโš ๏ธ Sometimes covered under access provisions
You proactively remove a leaning treeโŒ Not covered โ€” preventive removal
Tree was already dead before fallingโŒ Often denied as "negligence"
Tree falls during a hurricane (named storm)โš ๏ธ Higher deductible may apply

Step 1 โ€” Get Everyone Safe (and Don't Touch the Tree)

Before you call anyone, get people away from the damage zone. Even after a tree has fallen, fractured branches can drop without warning for hours. If a power line is involved, call KUB at 865-524-2911 first.

Once safe, don't move or cut anything until you've documented the damage with photos. Insurance adjusters need to see the original state.

Step 2 โ€” Document Everything (Critical Photos)

Take these specific photos. They make or break your claim:

  1. Wide shots showing the tree, the structure, and the ground from multiple angles
  2. Close-ups of the tree's break point โ€” was it healthy wood or was it rotted? (This determines liability)
  3. Damage to the structure โ€” roof, siding, gutters, fence, vehicle
  4. Interior damage if water got in
  5. Screenshot of the weather โ€” National Weather Service warnings, radar at the time of the event
  6. Date-stamped photos if your phone doesn't auto-add timestamps

Step 3 โ€” Call Your Insurance Company

Major carriers in Tennessee (State Farm, Allstate, Erie, USAA, Liberty Mutual, Farmers, Nationwide) all have 24/7 claim hotlines and mobile apps. File the claim within 24 hours of the damage if possible.

What to have ready:

They'll assign a claim number and dispatch an adjuster โ€” typically 1-5 days for non-emergencies, faster for major damage.

Step 4 โ€” Get Tree Removal Going Immediately

You don't need to wait for the adjuster to authorize tree removal in most cases. Most policies allow you to take reasonable steps to prevent further damage. That means:

Save all receipts and itemized invoices. Take "after" photos showing the cleanup work. The insurance company reimburses these as part of the claim.

Step 5 โ€” Don't Sign an "Assignment of Benefits" Without Reading It

Some "storm chaser" contractors will ask you to sign an Assignment of Benefits (AOB) form that assigns your insurance claim payout directly to them. Be very careful. AOBs can:

It's almost always better to pay the contractor directly and get reimbursed by insurance. If a contractor insists on AOB, get a second opinion.

Step 6 โ€” Understand Your Deductible

Standard Tennessee homeowner's policies typically have:

Check your policy. If the damage is close to your deductible, you may want to handle it out of pocket to avoid the claim affecting your premiums.

What If Your Claim Is Denied?

Common reasons for denial โ€” and what to do:

If the insurer denies a clearly valid claim, you can escalate to the Tennessee Department of Commerce and Insurance at 615-741-2218 or file a public adjuster complaint.

Emergency Tree Removal That Works With Your Insurance

We've handled hundreds of insurance jobs across Knox County. We provide:

Call (865) 348-3063 for emergency response. 24/7 across Knox County.

Related: Tree Fell On Your House? ยท Emergency Tree Service