June 8, 2025 hail storm near Albany, TX. Radar-confirmed hail track and contractor lead lists available.
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NWS WARNING AREA · Albany Metro · Jun 8, 2025 · Click a zone to highlight
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This storm generated 2 NWS alert zones. Pro access covers the complete storm track and all addresses across every zone.
Albany, TX
236 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Sun, Jun 8 · 4:17 AM UTC
Moran, TX
121 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Sun, Jun 8 · 5:00 AM UTC
Albany, TX saw a concluded hail event on June 8, 2025, with peak confirmed hail size of 1.5 inches. The storm produced two radar-confirmed alerts across the Albany metro area.
The first alert came at 11:17 PM CDT with 1.5-inch hail confidence from dual-polarization radar. A second alert followed at 12:00 AM CDT with 1-inch hail confidence. Both alerts were tied to the same storm system moving through the Albany area late in the evening and just after midnight.
The storm was concluded by the time of this report. The alert sequence shows a hail core that started at a larger size estimate, then narrowed to 1 inch in the later cycle. That pattern fits a storm that remained organized long enough to keep producing hail across more than one warning update.
A 1.5-inch hail report places the storm in a range that can affect roofs, gutters, exterior trim, vehicle surfaces, and soft metal components. Asphalt shingles can show bruising or granule loss. Metal roofing and exposed HVAC fins can also take impact.
The shift from 1.5 inches to 1 inch matters for field crews because it points to size variation across the storm track. Properties closer to the earlier hail core may show more pronounced impacts than locations covered by the later alert. Roof slopes, wind exposure, and the age of roofing materials can change how that damage appears on site.
In a multi-zone event like this one, contractors should expect uneven findings from street to street. One address may show light cosmetic impacts while a nearby property has more visible shingle loss, denting, or screen damage. Interior leaks may not appear immediately. Exterior inspection should come first, followed by attic and ceiling checks where roof impact is visible.
This event should be treated as a hail response in the Albany metro area, not a single-point claim cluster. Crews should map early inspections around the 11:17 PM CDT alert window first, then extend coverage to areas included in the 12:00 AM CDT update. That helps separate the higher hail estimate from the lower follow-up report.
Focus on roofs, gutters, window screens, vents, painted metal, and vehicle lot exposure. Document impact marks, fractured shingles, ridge cap wear, and dent patterns on soft metal surfaces. Photos should include the street-facing side of the property and close-ups of visible hail strikes. If the roof system has older shingles or prior repair patches, note those conditions during the walkaround.
Use the alert sequence to prioritize canvass routes. Properties near the earlier 1.5-inch hail signal should be inspected first, then nearby addresses under the later 1-inch alert. Keep crews in the same storm corridor long enough to compare damage across adjacent blocks. Small differences in hail size can produce clear differences in repair scope.
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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