August 9, 2025 hail storm near Elfrida, AZ. Radar-confirmed hail track and contractor lead lists available.
NWS WARNING AREA · Elfrida Metro · Aug 9, 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.
Elfrida, AZ
30 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Sat, Aug 9 · 10:11 PM UTC
Morenci, AZ
3 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Sat, Aug 9 · 11:41 PM UTC
Sierra Vista, AZ
3,042 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Sun, Aug 10 · 12:59 AM UTC
Pearce, AZ
361 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Sun, Aug 10 · 1:29 AM UTC
Elfrida, AZ saw a concluded hail storm on August 9, 2025, with maximum confirmed hail size of 1 inch. The event produced four hail alerts through the afternoon and evening.
The storm began producing 1-inch hail around 3:11 PM MST, then repeated that signal at 4:41 PM MST, 5:59 PM MST, and 6:29 PM MST. All four alerts carried dual-polarization radar confidence from NEXRAD.
The timing points to a storm that held its hail signal for several hours across the Elfrida area. The sequence moved from mid-afternoon into early evening, with the last alert issued at 6:29 PM MST.
This was a multi-zone aggregate storm report for the Elfrida metro area. The alerts were tied to the same hail size and remained consistent across the reporting window.
One-inch hail can break or crack older asphalt shingles, bruise softer roofing materials, and leave visible marks on vehicle panels, vents, and exposed trim. Roof impact patterns often vary by age, slope, and prior wear.
Field crews should expect a mix of cosmetic and functional findings on single-family roofs, outbuildings, patios, and vehicles. The most common targets in a 1-inch hail event are south- and west-facing roof slopes, skylights, AC fins, window screens, gutters, and painted metal surfaces.
In rural and edge-of-town settings around Elfrida, contractors should also check detached structures and equipment pads. Metal roofs can show denting even when leaks are not reported at first inspection. Soft metals, ridge caps, and roof accessories can show damage before the main roof field does.
Storm reports with repeated 1-inch hail alerts usually justify a systematic exterior inspection rather than a quick visual pass. Crews should document slope-by-slope conditions, note impact to penetrations and flashings, and compare roof wear against nearby properties in the same warning area.
Start with the roof surface, then move to penetrations, edge metal, and accessories. On this size hail event, damage can be scattered rather than uniform. That makes full slope coverage important, especially on older roofs and on properties with mixed materials.
Check vehicles, fences, gutters, screens, and soft metal trim during the same visit. In a concluded event like this one, the hail alerts already show the storm maintained a 1-inch signal over multiple hours. That supports canvassing across the affected community instead of focusing on a single block or one time stamp.
Set inspection priorities around exposure. Roofs with aging shingles, light gauge metal, and homes with unprotected skylights deserve earlier review. Document any soft metal strikes, shingle bruising, and accessory damage with location notes and photographs.
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Try the Free Demo →For sales and field routing, use the alert sequence to guide where crews start first. The repeated radar-derived hail signals suggest a broad inspection zone across Elfrida rather than a narrow one-pass path.
Use the Strike Map for precise hail track data.
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