
Fence down from a storm, a fallen tree, or an impact? We respond 24/7 to secure and repair downed fences across Beaverton and Washington County — same-day, after-hours, and weekends. Call now.
When a Pacific Northwest windstorm flattens a section of fence, a tree comes down across it, or a vehicle takes out the line, you need someone now — not a callback next week. That's exactly what this service is for. Beaverton Fence Pro answers around the clock and can be out the same day to secure your property and start the repair. We handle after-hours and weekend emergencies because that's when storm damage actually happens. Yes — we can fix your fence the same day in most cases, and at minimum we'll get it secured fast so your yard isn't left wide open.
If the fence is suddenly down or dangerous, this is the service to call.
Leaning or downed sections after a PNW windstorm. We get out fast to stand the fence back up or secure the gap before more weather hits.
A fallen limb or tree that's crushed a section. We clear the debris off the fence and repair the structural damage underneath.
A car, trailer, or object that took out a run of fence. We assess the hit, secure the opening, and rebuild the damaged section.
While you wait for us, a few quick steps protect both your safety and your wallet:
First we close the gap fast — then we make it right.
Beaverton Fence Pro answers 24/7 for storm and emergency fence damage across Beaverton and Washington County. The faster you call, the faster we secure your yard.

A standard homeowners policy usually covers fence damage from named perils — wind, hail, a falling tree, or a vehicle — typically under the "other structures" portion of the policy (often around 10% of your dwelling coverage), paid on an actual-cash-value basis with your deductible applying. And yes: if your neighbor's tree falls on your fence, your own policy generally covers it. One honest tip — if the repair estimate comes in below your deductible, paying out of pocket is often the smarter move than filing a claim.
Once the emergency is handled, we make sure the repair is built to stand up to the next storm, not just this one — posts reset in concrete with proper drainage, reinforced where the wind found the weak spot. If the damage is localized, our standard standard fence repair finishes the job; if too much of the line is gone, a full fence replacement is the better value. And if the breach exposed a pool, we'll restore the code barrier — see pool fence barrier repair. Serving the west side — check fencing in West Beaverton. Emergency repair is one of the full range of fencing services in Beaverton we provide.
Fences fail in a windstorm in fairly predictable ways, and knowing the pattern is half of fixing it fast. A solid privacy fence acts like a sail: the more area the wind catches, the harder it pushes on the posts, so the first thing to go is usually a post that was set too shallow, rotted at the ground line, or never properly footed in concrete. From there a leaning post drags a whole run with it, rails pull loose, and a single weak point becomes a downed section. Saturated Pacific Northwest soil makes it worse — ground that's been soaking for weeks holds a post far less firmly than dry summer soil, which is why our windstorms do their damage in winter. When we arrive, we read the failure before we rebuild: which posts moved, where the rot started, whether the wind found one weak bay or overwhelmed a sound fence. That tells us whether you need a section reset or a stronger rebuild, and it tells us where to reinforce so the same bay doesn't go down again the next time the wind comes through.
On an emergency call there are really two jobs, and we separate them on purpose. The first is to make the property safe and closed right now — bracing what's leaning, pulling tangled or tensioned debris back, and standing temporary fencing across the gap so pets stay in, the yard isn't exposed, and a breached pool barrier is covered. That part has to happen fast, day or night. The second job is the considered one: deciding whether the damage is local enough for a targeted repair or extensive enough that a rebuild is the better value. We won't talk you into replacing a fence that only needs a few posts and panels, and we won't band-aid a run that's structurally finished and will fail again in the next blow. We give you the honest read and let you decide. If the line is mostly intact, a standard fence repair closes it out properly; if too much is gone, rebuilding it once is cheaper than chasing it twice.
Storm fence claims move faster when the paper trail is clean, and the most useful evidence is the photos you take before anything is touched. Capture the whole scene first — the downed run, the post that gave way, the tree or vehicle that caused it, and a few wide shots that show where the fence sits on the property — then the close-ups. Note the date and what happened while it's fresh. Don't haul the debris off until it's all documented, because once it's cleared the original condition is gone for good. When we repair the fence, we provide our own photos and a clear, itemized written estimate that lines up with what your insurer needs to process the claim, so an adjuster sees a professional scope rather than a guess. We're not insurance agents and won't pretend to be — but having documentation that matches the work makes the conversation with your carrier a much shorter one.
Straight answers — no clicking around.
Fast securing, full repair, and insurance documentation from a licensed, insured Beaverton fence company.
(855) 598-3288