Hurricane Season Prep: What to Do Before Storm Season Hits Vero Beach

Hurricane season runs from June through November, according to the National Hurricane Center, and the months leading into it are also when Vero Beach sees its heaviest rain. That combination means exterior buildup and storm prep end up overlapping every year, whether people plan for it or not.

A powerful lightning bolt illuminates the night sky above a suburban neighborhood during a thunderstorm.

Timing

Why Timing Matters More Than People Think

June through October tend to be the wettest stretch of the year here, and that same stretch overlaps almost entirely with hurricane season. Waiting until a storm is already in the forecast to think about your exterior means competing with everyone else trying to prep at the same time, and starting from a property that has already had months of heavy rain and humidity to build up algae and grime.

Getting ahead of it in late spring, before the wettest months start, puts you in a very different position than trying to catch up in August or September.

The Checklist

What to Prioritize Before the Season Ramps Up

Roofs

Easier to inspect for loose shingles or damage when it is not covered in algae staining.

Driveways & Walkways

Most likely to end up covered in storm debris. A clean start makes damage easier to spot after.

Gutters & Drainage

Buildup can affect how well water drains during a heavy rain event, not just appearance.

Pool Cages & Screens

A clean enclosure makes it easier to spot torn or weakened screens before wind tests them.

Can pressure washing help you spot storm damage risk before it happens?

It can help somewhat. A clean surface makes existing damage, cracks, loose shingles, weakened screens, much easier to see than one hidden under months of algae or dirt. It is not a substitute for a real inspection, but it removes one layer of things in the way.

Aftermath

After the Storm Passes

Post storm cleanup usually involves more than a routine wash. Mud, storm debris, and sometimes salt residue from storm surge in coastal areas all need attention, and waiting too long after a storm passes can let that residue set in and become harder to remove than it would have been right away.

If your property is in one of the more exposed coastal or barrier island areas, that residue tends to be more stubborn than what an inland property deals with after the same storm.

The properties that come out of hurricane season looking best are the ones that started clean going into it.

Not the ones scrambling to book a cleaning the week a storm is forecast. If you have not had your property washed yet this year, late spring is a good window to get ahead of both the rain and the demand that picks up once storm season is underway.

Reach out for a free walkthrough and written estimate, and we will help you figure out what your property actually needs before the season gets busy.

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