July 8, 2025 hail storm near Corona, NM. Radar-confirmed hail track and contractor lead lists available.
NWS WARNING AREA · Corona Metro · Jul 8, 2025
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This storm generated 4 NWS alert zones. Pro access covers the complete storm track and all addresses across every zone.
Corona, NM
15 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Tue, Jul 8 · 7:36 PM UTC
Corona, NM
5 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Tue, Jul 8 · 8:30 PM UTC
Corona, NM
19 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Tue, Jul 8 · 8:59 PM UTC
Dexter, NM
9 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Wed, Jul 9 · 12:49 AM UTC
Corona, NM saw a concluded hail event on 2025-07-08 with a peak verified hail size of 1.5 inches. The storm produced four NWS hail alerts across the afternoon and early evening.
The storm developed in the Corona, NM metro on July 8, 2025 and produced repeated hail signals through the day. The first alert came at 1:36 PM MDT with 1-inch hail indicated by dual-polarization radar. The storm strengthened later in the afternoon. Alerts at 2:30 PM MDT and 2:59 PM MDT both carried 1.5-inch hail indications. A fourth alert followed at 6:49 PM MDT with the same 1.5-inch hail signal.
The alert sequence shows a storm that held organized hail growth for several hours. Radar-derived confidence remained consistent across the four warnings. The event was concluded by the time this report was compiled.
Hail at 1.5 inches can break roof shingles, bruise siding, dent metal surfaces, and crack weaker exterior fixtures. Vehicles parked outside can show visible impact on hoods, roofs, mirrors, and windshields. Soft metals, screens, skylights, and exposed HVAC components can also take strikes from hail in this range.
For roof work, crews should expect claims tied to slope, age, and prior wear. Asphalt shingles may show granule loss and fractures that are not obvious from the ground. Metal roofing can carry sharp impact marks and seam damage. Flat roofs may show punctures at vulnerable seams, penetrations, and edges. In the field, visible damage often varies block to block across the warning area.
Property owners should document any fresh impact points before cleanup begins. That includes roof surfaces, gutters, downspouts, window trim, siding, and outdoor equipment. Photos from multiple angles help preserve the condition of the property before repairs start.
Crews working Corona and nearby addresses should treat this as a hail event with enough size to warrant full exterior inspection. Focus on roof slopes exposed during the strongest part of the storm, then move to soft metal and accessory items. Check ridge caps, vents, flashing, gutters, and downspouts first. On vehicles, note glass chips, broken trim, and dent density by panel.
Use the alert timeline to narrow the likely inspection window. The first hail signal came early in the afternoon, then larger hail indications repeated around 2:30 PM MDT and 2:59 PM MDT. A later alert at 6:49 PM MDT suggests the storm remained capable of hail into the evening. Crews should expect multiple exposure periods rather than a single brief burst.
For estimating and triage, separate cosmetic marks from functional damage. Roofing materials can show different response by manufacturer and age. Siding, screens, and outdoor units often reveal the first clear impact points. Document each elevation separately. Keep notes tied to the storm date and the local time of the strongest hail indications.
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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