Hurricane season officially starts June 1st. But if you're waiting until May to prepare your Fort Myers or Naples rental property, you're already behind.

The difference between a property that weathers a Category 3 storm and one that suffers tens of thousands in damage often comes down to decisions made months earlier: insurance coverage locked in during February, roof inspections scheduled in March, structural reinforcements completed in April.

Here's your quick-start checklist to protect your Southwest Florida investment before the next advisory hits.

Insurance & Financial Protection: Close the Gaps Now

Over 99% of standard homeowners policies exclude flood damage. That's not a typo.

If you're managing a rental property in Lee or Collier County, flood insurance isn't optional: it's foundational. And it comes with a 30-day waiting period before coverage activates. That means you need to purchase it now, not when the National Hurricane Center names a system.

Action items for the next 30 days:

Florida property owner reviewing flood insurance documents and hurricane coverage on laptop

Home Inspections & Structural Hardening: Your Window Is Closing

June 1st is the deadline on the calendar. But contractor availability disappears weeks earlier.

If you're going to harden your property, schedule inspections and work orders now: before every roofer, shutter installer, and structural engineer in Southwest Florida is booked solid.

Critical inspection points:

Emergency Supplies & Tenant Communication: Plan for 7–10 Days

The old "three-day supply" guidance is outdated.

Modern rapid-intensification storms (like Ian in 2022) can leave properties without power, water, or road access for a week or longer. If your property is occupied, your tenants need to be prepared: and you need a communication plan in place.

What tenants need on hand:

Supply Minimum Quantity
Water 1 gallon per person per day (7–10 days)
Non-perishable food Canned goods, protein bars, dry staples
Medications 30-day supply + copies of prescriptions
Cash $500+ in small bills (ATMs fail during outages)
Batteries, flashlights, radio Weather radio and backup power for phones
Pet supplies Food, leash, carrier, vaccination records

Your role as the property owner:

If your tenants evacuate and the property is unoccupied during landfall, you need someone local who can assess damage and file claims within 48 hours. Delayed claims cost you weeks of lost rental income and thousands in unrecovered expenses.

Professional roof inspection checking hurricane straps and structural integrity in Southwest Florida

Pre-Storm Action Items: The 48-Hour Window

When the National Hurricane Center issues an advisory for Southwest Florida, you have roughly 48 hours before preparation becomes panic.

Immediate actions:

If your property is in a mobile home or manufactured housing, evacuation is mandatory. Tie-downs won't hold in a major hurricane.

How Sure Guard Protects Your Property Year-Round

Hurricane prep isn't a June problem. It's a January–December discipline.

At Sure Guard Property Services, we build proactive maintenance and inspection protocols into every Fort Myers and Naples property we manage. That means:

Our job isn't to react when the storm hits. It's to make sure your property is storm-ready long before the forecast cone appears.

Emergency hurricane supplies including water, flashlight, batteries, and first aid kit

Final Thought: Preparation Beats Panic Every Time

You can't control where a hurricane makes landfall. But you can control whether your property is insured correctly, structurally sound, and managed by a team that treats storm prep like the high-stakes process it is.

The owners who sleep well during hurricane season are the ones who made decisions in February: not frantic calls in late August.


Ready to hand off the hurricane prep, insurance coordination, and emergency response to a team that's been through it?

Request the Management Agreement Packet and let's talk about how Sure Guard builds year-round property protection into everything we do for Fort Myers and Naples property owners.

Because peace of mind shouldn't depend on the forecast.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *