August 4, 2025 hail storm near Robstown, TX. Radar-confirmed hail track and contractor lead lists available.
NWS WARNING AREA · Robstown Metro · Aug 4, 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.
Robstown, TX
20 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Mon, Aug 4 · 7:44 PM UTC
Edinburg, TX
Alert issued Mon, Aug 4 · 9:29 PM UTC
Edinburg, TX
4,267 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Mon, Aug 4 · 10:12 PM UTC
Robstown, TX recorded a concluded severe hail event on August 4, 2025, with a maximum confirmed hail size of 1 inch. The storm produced a single NWS alert area and was verified by dual-polarization radar confidence.
The storm crossed the Robstown area in the afternoon and reached its peak hail size by 2:44 PM CDT. At that time, the National Weather Service issued a severe thunderstorm alert for 1-inch hail across the warning area.
Dual-polarization radar support was present in the alert package. That radar signal matched the hail size report and gave the event a confirmed severe hail classification in Robstown.
The alert sequence was short. One alert covered the event, and no later escalation was needed. The storm was concluded by the end of the event window on August 4.
One-inch hail usually lands in the range where roof shingles, soft metals, vehicle panels, and exterior trim can show visible impact marks. In Robstown, the report supports a localized hail event rather than a broad hail field.
For contractors, the first checks should focus on slope roofs, gutters, downspouts, AC fins, vents, and parked vehicles. Asphalt shingles can lose granules without obvious punctures. Metal flashing and painted trim can show dents that are easier to confirm at close range.
Windows and skylights deserve a separate inspection. One-inch hail can chip seals, crack brittle accessories, and leave impact marks on exposed glazing or screens. Secondary damage can appear after the first round of water intrusion checks, especially on older roof systems.
Because the event stayed at one alert and one confirmed size, field teams can treat it as a tight inspection target. The most likely loss pattern is spotty, not uniform. Crew notes should separate direct hail marks from wind-driven debris, since the storm record supports hail as the primary hazard.
Plan the canvass around the afternoon hail window and start with the addresses closest to the warning area core. In a single-zone event like this, roof and exterior damage often clusters near the centerline of the hail path, while nearby properties may show no measurable loss. Document the roof slope, material type, and orientation before moving to trim, gutters, and accessory components.
Use close-range photo sets for every confirmed impact. Count dents on soft metals, check the full perimeter of the roof edge, and note any bruising on shingle mats or cracked plastic fittings. If the property has prior storm history, separate new hail marks from older wear. That keeps estimates clean and supports faster claims handling.
For service lines, the highest-value leads usually come from homes and light commercial buildings with aging roofs, exposed condensers, and parked vehicles in open lots. A narrow hail event can still produce a useful inspection queue if the property mix is dense and the exterior materials are vulnerable.
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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