What This Means For You

This free tool takes the guesswork out of understanding your regulatory alerts. Instead of trying to piece together information from multiple sources or waiting for a broker callback, you can get clear numbers in about two minutes.

Enter your information below — no account needed, no email required. The results will give you a solid starting point for making informed decisions about your benefits strategy.

Free Regulatory Alert Service for Roofing Contractors

Stop Finding Out About Regulatory Changes After They Cost You Money

Get plain-English alerts when coverage laws, OSHA rules, carrier actions, or building codes change in your state — before they affect your business.

Sign Up for Free Alerts
100% Free
No Spam — Only Relevant Alerts
Alerts Within 48 Hours

Five Categories of Alerts That Matter

We monitor regulatory changes across five critical areas so you can focus on running your business.

Insurance Law Changes

New statutes and regulations affecting claims processes, advertising restrictions, and adjuster interaction rules in your state.

Carrier Actions

Insurers entering or leaving your state, rate filings, coverage moratoriums, and underwriting guideline changes that impact your clients.

Licensing Updates

Contractor license requirements, continuing education mandates, coverage minimums, and bond amount changes you need to stay compliant.

OSHA & Safety Changes

New safety standards, enforcement focus areas, penalty adjustments, and inspection priorities specific to roofing work.

Building Code Updates

Wind mitigation requirements, impact-rated material standards, energy code changes, and local amendments that affect roofing specs.

Three Steps. Zero Hassle.

Sign up in under 60 seconds and never miss a regulatory change again.

1

Select Your State(s)

Choose the states where you operate. We track regulations in all 50 states.

2

Choose Alert Types

Pick the categories you care about — coverage, OSHA, licensing, codes, or all of them.

3

Get Instant Alerts

Receive real-time email alerts plus a monthly digest summarizing everything.

Here's What an Alert Looks Like

Every alert is written in plain English with clear action items — no legal jargon.

FL

New Roof-to-Wall Connection Requirements — What Roofers Need to Know

March 28, 2026 Building Code Update Florida

Effective July 1, 2026, Florida Building Code Section 706.11 now requires enhanced roof-to-wall connections using Simpson H10A hurricane clips (or equivalent) for all new construction and full re-roofs in Wind-Borne Debris Regions. The previous allowance for 3-nail connections on structures under 1,200 sq ft has been eliminated.

This affects every full re-roof in Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach counties immediately. Material costs will increase $0.15–$0.25 per square foot. Crews need training on the new clip spacing requirements (max 24" OC). Inspectors will reject any roof-to-wall connection that doesn't meet the updated specs.

Update your estimating templates to include the new clip costs. Brief your installation crews on the 24" OC spacing requirement. Order Simpson H10A clips (or approved equivalent) in bulk before demand spikes. Review any open bids in WBDR areas and adjust pricing before contracts are signed.

Sign Up for Free Regulatory Alerts

Takes less than 60 seconds. No credit card required. Unsubscribe anytime.

States of Operation (select all that apply)
Alert Preferences (select all that apply)
Delivery Frequency

Your information is secure. We never share your data. Unsubscribe anytime.

Getting Started — Your Next Steps

Common Questions

Is this regulatory alerts really free?
Yes, completely free with no strings attached. You do not need to create an account, provide an email address, or speak with anyone. The tool runs entirely in your browser and gives you results immediately.
How accurate are these estimates?
The calculations use industry-standard data and published rate tables, so they provide a reliable directional estimate. Your actual costs will depend on your specific situation, location, and the providers you work with. We recommend using these numbers as a starting point for getting real quotes.
What should I do with these results?
Use them as a baseline for informed conversations with brokers, PEOs, or insurance providers. Having these numbers before you talk to a salesperson puts you in a much stronger negotiating position and helps you evaluate whether the proposals you receive are competitive.