June 2, 2025 hail storm near Brownfield, TX. Radar-confirmed hail track and contractor lead lists available.
NWS WARNING AREA · Brownfield Metro · Jun 2, 2025
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This storm generated 16 NWS alert zones. Pro access covers the complete storm track and all addresses across every zone.
Brownfield, TX
495 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Mon, Jun 2 · 8:53 PM UTC
Fort Stockton, TX
5 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Mon, Jun 2 · 9:02 PM UTC
Slaton, TX
8,300 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Mon, Jun 2 · 9:41 PM UTC
Fort Stockton, TX
3,640 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Mon, Jun 2 · 9:42 PM UTC
Levelland, TX
133 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Mon, Jun 2 · 10:35 PM UTC
Fort Stockton, TX
50 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Mon, Jun 2 · 11:43 PM UTC
Tahoka, TX
1,753 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Tue, Jun 3 · 12:05 AM UTC
Fort Stockton, TX
3 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Tue, Jun 3 · 12:09 AM UTC
Fluvanna, TX
46 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Tue, Jun 3 · 2:49 AM UTC
Crane, TX
Alert issued Tue, Jun 3 · 3:09 AM UTC
Midland, TX
124 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Tue, Jun 3 · 3:43 AM UTC
Big Lake, TX
11 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Tue, Jun 3 · 3:53 AM UTC
Big Spring, TX
116 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Tue, Jun 3 · 4:42 AM UTC
Gail, TX
269 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Tue, Jun 3 · 4:54 AM UTC
Tahoka, TX
465 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Tue, Jun 3 · 5:32 AM UTC
Snyder, TX
838 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Tue, Jun 3 · 5:45 AM UTC
Brownfield, TX saw a concluded hail storm on June 2, 2025, with a maximum confirmed hail size of 1.25 inches. The event produced six hail alerts across the day and into early Monday morning.
The first alert came at 3:53 PM CDT with 1.25-inch hail indicated by dual-polarization radar. That was the peak size in the sequence. Two more radar-derived alerts followed at 4:41 PM CDT and 5:35 PM CDT, each calling for 1-inch hail.
A fourth alert was issued at 7:05 PM CDT with 1-inch hail and radar plus spotter-verified confidence. Two final alerts arrived after midnight, at 12:32 AM CDT and 12:45 AM CDT, both for 1-inch hail on dual-polarization radar confidence.
The storm sequence held a repeated hail threat through late afternoon, evening, and early overnight hours. The alert set ended with the system concluded.
Hail in the 1-inch to 1.25-inch range can leave visible impacts on roofs, soft metals, siding, and exterior trim. In Brownfield, the report supports a mixed impact profile rather than a single uniform damage pattern.
Roofing with marginal wear can show bruising to shingles, granule loss, and localized impact marks. Metal components such as vents, flashing, gutters, and downspouts may show dents. Window screens, fence tops, and vehicle surfaces can also show hail strikes where they were exposed during the stronger bursts.
The 7:05 PM CDT spotter-verified alert adds ground truth to the radar sequence. That support is useful for route planning and for narrowing the areas most likely to merit inspection first.
This event fits a field-response profile that can produce scattered roof claims, cosmetic metal damage, and spot repairs across multiple neighborhoods. Crews should expect variation block to block. A 1-inch hail alert does not produce the same result across every structure, especially where roof age, slope, and exposure differ.
For canvassing, focus on roof surfaces, ridge caps, soft metal lines, gutters, and south- and west-facing elevations where the storm path likely carried the most repeated hail. Pay attention to the time window from mid-afternoon through early evening, then extend checks into the overnight alerts. That sequence supports multiple inspection passes if the first review misses lighter but still relevant impact marks.
Field teams should document visible marks with roof slopes, elevation shots, and date-stamped photos. On multi-zone events like this one, the fastest triage comes from separating hard-hit structures from nearby properties that stayed outside the stronger hail path. Use the alert sequence to organize the lead pack before assigning roof-to-roof inspections.
The Strike Map shows the precise hail track for Brownfield, TX on June 2, 2025.
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Try the Free Demo →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