April 1, 2025 hail storm near Mirando City, TX. Radar-confirmed hail track and contractor lead lists available.
NWS WARNING AREA · Mirando City Metro · Apr 1, 2025
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Mirando City, TX
170 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Tue, Apr 1 · 12:13 AM UTC
Realitos, TX
Alert issued Tue, Apr 1 · 12:51 AM UTC
Mirando City, TX saw a concluded severe hail storm on April 1, 2025, with peak confirmed hail of 1 inch. Two NWS alerts were issued for the event during the early evening.
The storm produced verified 1-inch hail in and around Mirando City on April 1, 2025. The first alert came at 7:13 PM CDT, followed by a second alert at 7:51 PM CDT. Both alerts carried dual-polarization radar confidence tied to NEXRAD hail detection.
The event was brief but organized enough to trigger two separate warnings in the same evening window. The repeated 1-inch hail signal points to a hail-producing storm core that persisted across multiple warning updates.
Hail at 1 inch is large enough to produce visible impact on exposed vehicles, roof coverings, gutters, siding, and outdoor equipment. In a town like Mirando City, the most common field checks after a storm of this size begin with soft metals, vents, window trim, and roof slopes that take the longest direct exposure to the core.
Crews should expect mixed results across a small footprint. One property can show only light cosmetic marks while a nearby roof or vehicle picks up heavier loss where the hail core passed twice or where the storm slowed. The two alert sequence supports a localized hail swath rather than broad, uniform impact.
For restoration teams, 1-inch hail usually warrants a fast exterior survey. Asphalt shingles, dimensional shingles, metal awnings, roof accessories, and HVAC fins should all be checked in the same visit. On older roofs, repeated hail hits can leave bruising and granule loss that is easier to document from the ground before conditions change.
On commercial sites, look first at flat roof edges, metal coping, skylights, rooftop units, and any storefront glazing facing the storm path. Parking lots with exposed fleet vehicles often show the first visible losses, especially when the storm arrives during peak activity hours.
This event gives contractors a clear target for canvass planning in Mirando City. The hail size was large enough to justify exterior inspection routes, especially for homes and businesses with roof age beyond the current replacement cycle. Focus the first pass on properties with open exposure, recent roof claims, and assets that sat in the warning area during the early evening.
The timeline matters. The 7:13 PM CDT alert and the 7:51 PM CDT alert place the storm in a narrow window, which helps narrow field interviews and estimate where the hardest-hit addresses may cluster. Use that window to separate direct hail exposure from nearby rainfall or wind-only reports. Document roof surfaces, downspouts, soft metals, and vehicles in the same visit so the record stays consistent.
For sales and inspection teams, keep the approach local and specific. Map properties by street-level access, roof slope, and visible exposure to the storm path. Focus on repeatable signs of hail impact rather than broad assumptions based on the town as a whole.
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Address data is sourced from the US National Address Database (NOAA/USDOT). Inclusion of an address does not guarantee physical damage occurred. Confidence scores are radar-derived estimates. Data Accuracy Disclaimer