Oklahoma inspection call prep

What to tell Oklahoma inspection routing after a storm

Inspection routing goes faster when you describe the property clearly and keep the storm details simple. This page helps Oklahoma callers gather the details that matter without turning the call into a weather report.

Keep the order simple: Official alerts first, ground-only walkaround second, then this call-prep page. Do not delay safety decisions just to gather more details for the call.

Start with the Oklahoma location details

Have the city, ZIP code, and nearest Oklahoma community ready. If the property sits outside a town center, add the nearest highway, county road, or landmark that helps describe the area.

For metro properties, it also helps to mention the side of town or the nearby suburb, such as north Oklahoma City, south Moore, west Yukon, east Edmond, Broken Arrow, or another close community reference.

Keep the storm timing practical

You do not need a perfect radar timeline. The useful version is the date of the storm, the rough time if you know it, and whether the main concern sounded or looked like hail, high wind, debris impact, heavy rain, or a mix.

If the property has seen more than one recent storm, say which event you think lines up best with the visible clues.

Describe the visible clues, not a diagnosis

Include property and access notes

Let the routing side know whether the concern is at the main house only or whether detached garages, shops, barns, carports, or fences may also be involved. Mention gate access, tenant occupancy, dogs, or scheduling limits only if they materially affect the visit.

If you still need help deciding whether the concern is broad enough for whole-property routing, use when to request a whole-property inspection next.