Key Takeaways:
2026 forecast: 17–22 named storms, 8–11 hurricanes, 4–6 major (Category 3+), above 30-year average
Properties with documented prep plans see 40% faster insurance settlements and 60% less secondary damage
ACCRIVE’s hurricane protocol includes pre-season inspections, vendor staging, tenant communication, and post-storm claims advocacy, all included in management
2026 Hurricane Season Outlook: What the Models Show
| Forecast Source | Named Storms | Hurricanes | Major (Cat 3+) | Key Driver |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NOAA (May 2026) | 17–22 | 8–11 | 4–6 | Record-warm Atlantic, La Niña transition |
| CSU (April 2026) | 20 | 9 | 4 | Low shear, high SSTs in MDR |
| ECMWF (Seasonal) | 18 | 10 | 5 | Persistent Bermuda High steering west |
| 30-Year Average (1991–2020) | 14.4 | 7.2 | 3.2 | Baseline |
Landfall probability (Florida peninsula): 68% for any hurricane, 38% for major hurricane — both above climatology.
The 5-Phase ACCRIVE Hurricane Protocol
Phase 1: Pre-Season (May 1–31) — Hardening & Documentation
Roof inspection: Wind mitigation re-certification, flashing/sealant check, loose tile/shingle repair
Drainage & grading: Clear swales, test sump pumps, verify downspout extensions (6 ft minimum)
Tree canopy: Certified arborist assessment — remove deadwood, thin crossing limbs, crown reduction on >30 ft trees near structures
Opening protection: Deploy/inspect shutters, verify impact glass labels, test manual overrides on motorized systems
Documentation package: 360° interior/exterior photos, video walkthrough, serialized appliance/inventory list — uploaded to owner portal
Phase 2: Watch Stage (72–48 hrs out) — Activation
Vendor staging: Roof tarping crews, water extraction, tree removal, board-up contractors on standby contracts
Tenant communication: Automated SMS/email with property-specific evacuation zone, shelter locations, pet policy, portal document access
Property systems: Fuel generators, test transfer switches, fill water tanks, secure loose items (patio furniture, grills, planters)
Insurance readiness: Carrier claims hotlines, policy numbers, deductible confirmations pre-loaded in claims portal
Phase 3: Warning Stage (36–12 hrs out) — Lockdown
Final shutdown: Gas/water main valves tagged, electrical non-essential circuits off, elevators recalled to top floor (multifamily)
Tenant check-in: Confirm occupancy status, special needs registry, emergency contact verification
Documentation snapshot: Timestamped photos of secured property — before/after comparison baseline
Phase 4: Event Passage (Landfall + 24 hrs) — Safety First
No field deployments until official all-clear from EOC
Remote monitoring: Weather station data, flood gauges, security camera feeds (where powered)
Tenant welfare checks: SMS blast with 911/non-emergency numbers, shelter status links
Phase 5: Recovery (Day 1–30) — Restoration & Claims
Damage assessment: Drone roof inspection (Day 1), moisture mapping (Day 2), structural engineer if indicated
Mitigation deployment: Tarping, water extraction, dehumidification — within 4 hrs of access
Claims package: Annotated photos, contractor estimates, mitigation invoices, tenant displacement logs — submitted Day 3–5
Displacement management: Hotel coordination, rent abatement tracking, temporary housing lease-ups
Property-Type Specific Checklists
Single-Family Homes (SFH)
| Item | Responsibility | Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Roof mitigation inspection | ACCRIVE | May 15 |
| Tree canopy assessment | ACCRIVE (vendor) | May 31 |
| Shutter/impact glass verification | ACCRIVE | May 31 |
| Generator test (if present) | ACCRIVE | May 31 |
| Tenant evacuation plan delivery | ACCRIVE | June 1 |
| Yard secure protocol | Tenant (lease addendum) | 48 hrs pre-storm |
Multifamily / Small Apartment (2–20 units)
| Item | Responsibility | Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Common area wind mitigation | ACCRIVE | May 15 |
| Elevator recall test | ACCRIVE (vendor) | May 31 |
| Fire pump/generator load test | ACCRIVE (vendor) | May 31 |
| Hallway/stairwell clearing | ACCRIVE | 72 hrs pre-storm |
| Resident communication (multilingual) | ACCRIVE | 72 hrs pre-storm |
| Unit-level prep checklist distribution | ACCRIVE | 7 days pre-storm |
Commercial / Mixed-Use
| Item | Responsibility | Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Roof-mounted equipment strapping | ACCRIVE (vendor) | May 15 |
| Signage removal/secure | Tenant (lease clause) | 48 hrs pre-storm |
| Inventory elevation (ground floor) | Tenant + ACCRIVE | 72 hrs pre-storm |
| Business interruption documentation | ACCRIVE | Ongoing |
| Critical vendor access agreements | ACCRIVE | Pre-season |
Insurance Claim Acceleration: What Slows You Down vs. ACCRIVE Process
| Typical Owner Delay | ACCRIVE Standard | Time Saved |
|---|---|---|
| Finding policy/deductible | Pre-loaded in portal | 2–3 days |
| Contractor estimates (3 bids) | Pre-negotiated vendor panel | 7–10 days |
| Mitigation authorization | Pre-signed work orders | 24–48 hrs |
| Adjuster scheduling | Direct carrier relationship | 3–5 days |
| Supplemental claim filing | Proactive scope review | 14–21 days |
| Total cycle (first payment) | 22 days faster | 3–4 weeks |
Case Study: The Pompano Beach 12-Unit Portfolio (Hurricane Milton Scenario)
Client: Local investor, 12 units across 3 buildings (1970s construction, slab-on-grade)
Event: Cat 3 landfall 40 mi south — 85 mph sustained winds, 12″ rain, 3 ft storm surge
ACCRIVE Protocol Execution:
| Phase | Action | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-Season | Roof mitigation re-cert + 4 trees removed | Carrier renewed at -8% vs. market |
| Watch | 3 tarp crews staged, tenant SMS blast (100% delivery) | 0 units boarded up by owner |
| Warning | Gas/electric shutoff, elevator recall, generators fueled | 0 safety incidents |
| Event | Remote monitoring via 3 weather stations | Real-time wind/rain data logged |
| Recovery Day 1 | Drone roof inspection: 8 shingles lifted, 2 vent caps off | Photos to carrier Day 1 |
| Recovery Day 2 | Tarp deployment (4 hrs), water extraction Unit 4 (AC leak) | Mitigation complete Day 2 |
| Recovery Day 3 | Claims package: $142K estimate, mitigation invoices, tenant logs | Submitted Day 3 |
| Recovery Day 14 | First payment received ($98K ACV) | 22 days faster than peer avg |
| Recovery Day 45 | All repairs complete, depreciation recovered ($38K) | Full settlement 90 days |
Tenant retention: 11/12 renewed (1 relocated for job)
Owner time investment: 2 hours (approval calls only)
Free Hurricane Readiness Audit: Your Starting Point
Not sure where your properties stand? Our Free Hurricane Readiness Audit delivers:
Property-by-property vulnerability score (wind, flood, surge, tree, roof)
Mitigation credit optimization — what upgrades qualify for max discounts
Evacuation zone confirmation + shelter mapping for each address
Vendor readiness assessment — are your contractors on standby contracts?
Tenant communication template library (English/Spanish/Creole)
Insurance claims packet checklist — pre-filled with your policy data
Delivered in 48 hours — zero cost for ACCRIVE management clients
Get Your Free Hurricane Readiness Audit →
Frequently Asked Questions
What if my tenant refuses to evacuate?
We document: certified letter to unit, SMS/email record, photo of posted notice. Lease addendum (included in our management) requires compliance with mandatory evacuation orders. Non-compliance = lease violation, but we never physically remove — that’s law enforcement.
Who pays for hotel/temporary housing if unit is uninhabitable?
Covered loss (wind/rain): Loss of Use coverage on your policy — we file and track
Flood (rising water): Separate NFIP/private flood policy — Loss of Use often excluded; we coordinate FEMA/SBA
Non-covered: Tenant’s renters insurance (required in our leases) or owner discretion
ACCRIVE role: We negotiate with carriers, coordinate placements, track rent abatement
Do you charge extra for hurricane response?
No. Full protocol — inspections, vendor staging, tenant comms, claims advocacy — is included in management fee. Third-party costs (tarping, extraction, tree removal) are passed through at vendor cost with no markup.
What about flood zones X (low risk) – do I need flood insurance?
Yes. 25% of NFIP claims come from Zone X. Private flood policies start at $300–$500/year for $250K coverage. We quote both markets annually. Post-Ian analysis: Zone X owners without flood insurance averaged $42K out-of-pocket.
How do you handle price gouging by contractors post-storm?
Pre-negotiated standby contracts with 150+ vendors lock rates for 12 months. Emergency rates capped at 1.5x standard. We audit every invoice against contract — rejected $23K in inflated charges for clients post-Milton.
Can I just use my own roofer/contractor?
Yes — if they’re licensed, insured, and sign our vendor agreement (rate cap, response time, documentation standards). We’ll add them to the property’s approved vendor list.
What’s the biggest mistake owners make?
Waiting for the cone of uncertainty to narrow. By then, vendors are booked, materials gone, adjusters overwhelmed. May preparation = September recovery. October preparation = December displacement.
2026 Hurricane Season Key Dates
| Date | Milestone |
|---|---|
| May 15 | Pre-season inspections complete |
| May 31 | All mitigation docs uploaded to portal |
| June 1 | Season starts — tenant comms delivered |
| June 15 | Vendor standby contracts confirmed |
| August 15–October 15 | Peak activity window (80% of FL landfalls) |
| November 30 | Season ends — post-season review |
Ready to Harden Your Portfolio Before the First Storm?
Hurricane risk isn’t optional in South Florida — but catastrophic loss is. ACCRIVE turns preparation into a managed process, not a panic event.
Three ways to start:
Schedule a Hurricane Strategy Call — 30 minutes, we review your properties’ specific vulnerabilities
Request Your Free Hurricane Readiness Audit — Property-level vulnerability scores in 48 hours
Explore Our Risk Management Services — Full protocol, insurance coordination, claims advocacy
ACCRIVE | Full-Service Property Management & Brokerage | Weston, FL | accrive.com | Licensed Real Estate Broker
