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Phased Hurricane Shutter Installation
Phased Installation Guide · 2026

Phased Hurricane Shutter Installation How to Protect Your Home in Stages Without Wasting Money

Whole-house hurricane protection costs $10,000 to $30,000. Most homeowners cannot write that check at once. The good news is that phasing your installation intelligently gets you meaningful protection now, at a cost you can manage, without paying a premium for doing it in stages.

Quick summary

Whole-house hurricane protection costs $10,000 to $30,000. Most homeowners cannot write that check at once. The good news is that phasing your installation intelligently gets you meaningful protection now, at a cost you can manage, without paying a premium for doing it in stages.

The Core Principle: Protect the Most Vulnerable First

The Core Principle: Protect the Most Vulnerable First

A hurricane does not care whether 80% of your windows have shutters. It will find the 20% that don't. Phased installation works when you prioritize ruthlessly — protecting the openings most likely to fail and cause catastrophic damage before working toward whole-house coverage.

The hierarchy of vulnerability:

  1. Garage door — the single largest and weakest opening on most homes. A failed garage door can cause the roof to lift. Protect this first regardless of anything else.
  2. Sliding glass doors and large picture windows — large glazed openings fail earlier under wind pressure than small windows and allow massive water intrusion when they do.
  3. Primary exposure facades — the sides of your home facing south and east (Atlantic coast) or south and west (Gulf coast) take the most direct wind load. Protect these faces before protected unexposed sides.
  4. Entry doors — exterior doors without reinforcement can fail and allow rapid pressurization of the interior. Hurricane-rated door hardware is inexpensive relative to shutters.
  5. Remaining windows — smaller windows on protected facades last.
A Practical 2–3 Year Phasing Plan

A Practical 2–3 Year Phasing Plan

PhaseWhat to ProtectTypical CostProtection Level
Year 1Garage door + all sliding glass doors + largest picture windows$3,000–$8,00060–70% of risk eliminated
Year 2All remaining windows on primary exposure facade(s)$3,000–$6,00085–90% of risk eliminated
Year 3Remaining windows on protected facades + lanai/patio$2,000–$5,000100% coverage

This plan delivers most of the safety benefit in Year 1 at roughly one-third the whole-house cost, then systematically closes the remaining gaps over two additional seasons — each at a manageable spend.

How Phasing Affects Permits and Cost

How Phasing Affects Permits and Cost

Each phase requires its own building permit. This adds $150–$400 in permit fees per phase compared to a single whole-house permit — but that premium is far smaller than the carrying cost of financing the entire job in year one.

To minimize the permit cost penalty of phasing:

  • Tell your contractor you plan to phase when getting the initial quote — they can design the first permit to reference the planned future phases, which streamlines subsequent permits
  • Use the same contractor across phases — they already have your home's measurements, product approval numbers, and permit history, reducing their overhead on phases 2 and 3
  • Group openings by facade or room rather than doing scattered individual windows — permits and installation are more efficient by area
Insurance Implications of Partial Protection

Insurance Implications of Partial Protection

Partial protection creates a nuanced insurance situation. Here is what to expect:

  • Partial credit is possible — some insurers offer partial wind mitigation credits for partial opening protection. The specific credit depends on which openings are protected and your insurer's scoring model.
  • Full credit requires all openings — most insurers' maximum wind mitigation discount requires all openings to be protected. Partial protection gets a partial discount.
  • Get a wind mitigation inspection after each phase — document each phase's completed work and submit an updated report to your insurer. Each phase should increase your discount.
  • Do not wait for 100% to file — the partial discount from Phase 1 may partially offset the cost of Phase 2.

Use our insurance savings estimator to model what partial protection saves on your premium.

Keep Products Consistent Across Phases

Keep Products Consistent Across Phases

The most important planning decision for a phased installation is product consistency. Using the same product across all phases:

  • Simplifies the permit process — the same FL approval covers all phases
  • Gives a uniform appearance to the finished home
  • Simplifies maintenance — one system to service and repair
  • Allows the contractor to order track and hardware in bulk, reducing per-unit material cost

Decide on your product (accordion, roll-down, storm panels) in Year 1 and commit to it for the entire phased plan. Mixing products across phases creates complexity and higher long-term maintenance cost.

The scenarios below are illustrative composites based on documented market patterns, FEMA post-storm data, and OIR wind mitigation discount schedules. They represent realistic outcomes, not specific individuals.

Pinellas County — The Garage Door First Decision

When Barbara decided to phase her shutter installation over two years, her contractor's recommendation surprised her: start with the garage door, not the windows. She had assumed the windows were the priority — they were more numerous and felt more vulnerable.

Her contractor explained the structural argument: a failed garage door pressurizes the interior and can lift the roof from the inside. A failed window allows water intrusion and wind entry but doesn't produce the same sudden pressure differential. In a direct hit, the garage door failure is often the event that cascades into catastrophic roof loss.

Year 1: wind-rated garage door ($1,800) plus accordion shutters on all sliding glass doors and large picture windows ($6,400) — $8,200 total. Year 2: remaining windows ($7,600). The Year 1 installation eliminated the highest-risk openings from a structural standpoint. 'I wanted to start with what looked most vulnerable,' Barbara said. 'He helped me start with what was most dangerous.'

What this means for your home: When phasing your shutter installation, start with the openings that pose structural risk to the entire home — not just the openings that feel most exposed. A garage door failure can cascade into roof loss. A large sliding glass door failure allows massive water intrusion. Prioritize these over the numerous smaller windows that are also vulnerable but whose failure, while damaging, doesn't threaten the structure the same way.

Manatee County — The Consistent Product Decision

David phased his accordion shutter installation over three years — starting with the rear of the house, then the sides, then the front street-facing facade. Each year he got a new quote. Each year a different contractor offered a lower price than his original installer.

In year two, David switched contractors to save $1,200. The new contractor installed a different brand of accordion shutter — same product type, different manufacturer, different track profile. In year three, when he went back to finish the front of the house, he discovered that the two track systems were incompatible. The bottom tracks used different fastener spacing. The slat profiles were slightly different widths.

Finishing the project required David to use a third contractor who could work with both track systems — and who charged a premium for the complication. Total additional cost attributable to the brand switch: approximately $2,800. 'I saved $1,200 in year two,' David said. 'I spent $2,800 extra in year three because of it.'

What this means for your home: When phasing a shutter installation across multiple seasons, commit to a single manufacturer and product line for the entire project in your Year 1 contract. Get a written quote from your Year 1 contractor for the complete scope, with pricing locked for at least 18 months if possible. Switching manufacturers between phases to save money on individual segments almost always costs more total than the savings justify, due to track incompatibility and the premium charged to work with mixed systems.

Charlotte County — The Insurance Credit That Grew

When Susan phased her accordion shutter installation over two years in Punta Gorda, she had her wind mitigation inspection updated after each phase — not just after the project was complete. The Year 1 inspection — covering the garage door and all large openings — produced a partial wind mitigation credit that reduced her annual premium by $680.

The Year 2 inspection — after completion of all remaining windows — increased the credit to $1,340 per year. The incremental Year 1 savings of $680 paid for a significant portion of the Year 2 installation's financing cost. 'I didn't know you could get a partial credit,' Susan said. 'My contractor told me. My insurance agent confirmed it. I had been assuming I had to finish everything before I saw any savings.'

Over the two-year phased installation, Susan received $680 in Year 1 savings and $1,340 in Year 2 savings — $2,020 in total insurance savings that partially offset the installation cost before the project was even complete.

What this means for your home: Get a wind mitigation inspection updated after each phase of a phased installation — not only after full completion. Partial opening protection generates partial insurance credits at most insurers. The Year 1 credits can meaningfully reduce your net cost for subsequent phases. Your inspector can complete an updated report after each phase for $150–$200, and the resulting premium reduction often exceeds that cost in the first year.

Sources: Florida OIR wind mitigation partial credit guidelines; Pinellas County structural engineering post-storm assessments; Charlotte County permit data post-Charley; Florida construction contractor licensing seasonal data.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Is partial protection better than no protection?

Absolutely — protecting 60% of your openings eliminates most of the catastrophic failure scenarios. The goal of phasing is to get meaningful protection in place now while working toward whole-house coverage. An unprotected home is far more vulnerable than a partially protected one.

Can I mix storm panels in year one with accordion shutters in later years?

You can — and many homeowners do this to reduce Year 1 costs. Storm panels on the largest openings provide immediate protection at lower cost. Accordion shutters on remaining openings in later phases give you permanent protection without deployment burden. The two systems can coexist on the same home. The downside is two different systems to maintain and operate.

Will my contractor give me a better price if I commit to all phases upfront?

Often yes — a contractor who knows they have a 3-year relationship with a customer will sometimes discount Year 1 work in exchange for the committed future business. Get this in writing — a letter of intent or a phased project agreement specifying the planned scope of each phase and approximate pricing. This protects both you and the contractor.