June 24, 2025 hail storm near Cypress, TX. Radar-confirmed hail track and contractor lead lists available.
NWS WARNING AREA · Cypress Metro · Jun 24, 2025
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This storm generated 3 NWS alert zones. Pro access covers the complete storm track and all addresses across every zone.
Cypress, TX
54,902 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Tue, Jun 24 · 9:16 PM UTC
Kennard, TX
54 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Tue, Jun 24 · 9:29 PM UTC
Magnolia, TX
Alert issued Tue, Jun 24 · 9:29 PM UTC
Cypress, TX saw a concluded hail event on June 24, 2025 with 1-inch hail reported across multiple alert areas. The storm produced three radar-backed alerts in the late afternoon.
The hail event in Cypress developed in the late afternoon on June 24, 2025. The first alert came at 4:16 PM CDT with 1-inch hail indicated by dual-polarization radar. Two additional alerts followed at 4:29 PM CDT, each again tied to 1-inch hail and dual-polarization radar confidence.
All three alerts were issued within 13 minutes. The repeated radar confidence points to a compact hail-producing cell that maintained intensity through multiple passes over the Cypress area. The storm is now concluded.
The timing places the hail threat in the same window across the metro area, with the warning area covering the broader path of the storm as it moved through the region. The confirmed hail size stayed at 1 inch throughout the event.
One-inch hail can leave visible impact on roofs, screens, soft metals, and exterior trim. In Cypress, inspections should focus on asphalt shingles, roof vents, ridge caps, siding, window screens, gutters, and vehicle surfaces exposed during the alert window.
Roof damage may present as bruising, granule loss, or isolated shingle fractures. Metal components can show dents. Vinyl siding and painted fascia often show impact marks that are easier to see in angled light. Vehicles parked outside during the storm may carry widespread cosmetic damage, especially on horizontal panels.
For multi-zone events like this one, field crews should not assume equal impact across the full warning area. Hail coverage can shift quickly across adjacent neighborhoods. A structure on one side of Cypress may show no damage while another, only blocks away, carries clear impact marks.
Contractors should document each property with date-stamped photos, roof slope images, and ground-level shots of impact on soft metals and accessories. On residential claims, the most reliable early indicators are usually dented gutters, damaged screens, and concentrated granule loss on slopes facing the storm path. Commercial sites need special attention on HVAC fins, skylights, rooftop membrane edges, and exposed trade fixtures.
Crews working Cypress on June 24 should prioritize a quick exterior triage before full roof access. The event produced 1-inch hail, which is enough to justify inspection on exposures within the alert areas, especially homes with older shingles, south- and west-facing slopes, and properties with visible collateral hits on vents or downspouts.
Use consistent field notes. Record the address, time on site, roof type, slope condition, and whether impact is isolated or distributed. Check soft metals first. Then move to roof planes, window screens, fence tops, and vehicle lots. If a property has no obvious ground-level impacts, that does not clear the roof. If a property shows multiple dented accessories, roof verification becomes the next step.
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Try the Free Demo →For estimators, narrow the canvass to the neighborhoods inside the alert sequence rather than treating Cypress as a single uniform field. The 4:16 PM CDT alert and the pair at 4:29 PM CDT provide a tight timing window for dispatch planning. That helps crews line up inspections, photo review, and supplement follow-up without overextending the day.
The Strike Map provides precise hail track data for this Cypress event.
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