April 20, 2025 hail storm near Post, TX. Radar-confirmed hail track and contractor lead lists available.
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NWS WARNING AREA · Post Metro · Apr 20, 2025 · Click a zone to highlight
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This storm generated 3 NWS alert zones. Pro access covers the complete storm track and all addresses across every zone.
Post, TX
751 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Sun, Apr 20 · 12:47 AM UTC
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19,350 addresses in warning area
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Alert issued Sun, Apr 20 · 3:17 AM UTC
A multi-zone hail storm affected Post, TX on April 20, 2025, with 1-inch hail confirmed in three separate warning areas through late evening. The storm concluded after repeated alerts from 7:47 PM CDT to 10:17 PM CDT.
The first severe thunderstorm alert came at 7:47 PM CDT with 1-inch hail and spotter-reported confidence. Two later alerts followed at 9:30 PM CDT and 10:17 PM CDT, each carrying a 1-inch hail threat with radar and spotter verified confidence.
The alert sequence shows a storm that maintained hail potential across multiple zones after sunset. The latest warning expired after the 10:17 PM CDT alert, and the event is now concluded.
Post sat under repeated hail coverage through the evening as the storm tracked across the area. The warning areas shifted over time, but the hail size held at 1 inch in each alert.
One-inch hail is enough to leave visible impacts on cars, roofs, vents, and exterior trim. Field crews should expect broken or missing shingles on older roofs, soft metal damage on accessories, and impact marks on siding, window screens, and gutters.
In town, roof checks should focus on south- and west-facing slopes, ridge caps, flashing, and any roof sections already weakened by prior weather. On vehicles, even short exposure can produce body-panel dents and cracked windshields, especially where cover was limited. Light commercial roofs, canopies, and HVAC housings also deserve close inspection.
The multi-alert structure matters for scheduling. A property that saw hail in the first zone may have taken another round later in the evening. Crews should not treat this as a single-pass event. Different addresses can show different levels of impact across the warning areas.
For insurance work, document each property with time-stamped photos, roof slope notes, and any matching vehicle or exterior damage. Keep attention on impact patterns rather than broad assumptions about the whole town. The hail size stayed at 1 inch, but exposure likely varied by zone and by roof orientation.
Start with a quick drive-by inventory. Look for fresh granule loss, dented downspouts, bruised shingles, and broken soft metals before committing to full climbs. If the roof age is older or the slope is low-pitch, the chance of visible loss is higher after a 1-inch event.
Use the evening timing to narrow canvass plans. The first verified hail report came before 8 PM CDT, then the storm repeated into late evening. That gives sales and inspection teams a clean time window for customer contact, photo review, and supplemental loss screening. Prioritize addresses that sat under the later warning areas, since repeated hail exposure can change the repair profile.
Field teams should separate cosmetic impact from functional damage. Vehicles, screen enclosures, gutters, and roof accessories often show the clearest signs first. On rooftops, check for displaced tabs, seal strip disturbance, and soft strikes on ridge and hip lines. If the property had prior repair history, inspect closely around patched areas and transitions.
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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