ClaimScopePro
Anonymized sample

What the AI actually produces

Every proposed item comes with three things an adjuster can't wave off: a plain-English reason it's owed, the building code that requires it, and the photos that prove the condition. You review each one before anything is sent.

1

Cited to code, not opinion

Each item names the exact code section and quotes it. The argument is 'code requires this,' not 'we think you should pay.'

2

Matched to your photos

The condition that triggers the item is tied to specific photos from the job — the documentation adjusters ask for to approve.

3

You stay in control

Accept it, rewrite the rationale, or reject it. Nothing reaches the carrier until you finalize the package.

Missed item found
High confidence

Drip edge — eaves & rakes

Edge metal

The carrier scope replaces the shingle field but omits drip edge at eaves and rakes. Code requires it on any shingle roof; photos 4 & 7 show no existing drip edge, so it must be installed new as part of a code-compliant replacement.

IRC R905.2.8.5· International Residential Code

A drip edge shall be provided at eaves and rake edges of shingle roofs.

Eave — no drip edgeRake edge close-up
AcceptEditReject

A supplement is a stack of these

One run typically surfaces several missed items. Here are three from a single hail claim — the finalized PDF collects the ones you accept, with a cover page, the cited rationale for each, and a photo appendix.

Missed item found
High confidence

Drip edge — eaves & rakes

Edge metal

The carrier scope replaces the shingle field but omits drip edge at eaves and rakes. Code requires it on any shingle roof; photos 4 & 7 show no existing drip edge, so it must be installed new as part of a code-compliant replacement.

IRC R905.2.8.5· International Residential Code

A drip edge shall be provided at eaves and rake edges of shingle roofs.

Eave — no drip edgeRake edge close-up
AcceptEditReject
Missed item found
High confidence

Ice & water barrier — eaves & valleys

Underlayment

Property is in a region with a documented ice history and the scope carries only synthetic underlayment. Code requires a self-adhering ice barrier from the eave edge to 24" inside the exterior wall line, plus valleys. Photos 11–13 show open valleys and low eave overhang.

IRC R905.1.2· International Residential Code

In areas where there has been a history of ice forming along the eaves, an ice barrier shall be installed.

Valley — open metalEave detailNorth slope
AcceptEditReject
Missed item found
Medium confidence

Steep-slope & two-story labor

Labor

Photos 2 and 5 show a two-story elevation with a pitch consistent with 8:12+. The carrier scope prices all field labor as standard-slope, single-story. Steep and height charges apply to the affected squares.

Manufacturer application spec· GAF / Owens Corning install guidelines

Application on slopes exceeding 7:12 and multi-story access requires additional labor and staging per manufacturer guidelines.

Front elevation — 2-storyRear slope pitch
AcceptEditReject

See it run on your own claim

Upload a real scope and photo set during your trial and watch the supplement build itself.