September 26, 2025 hail storm near Sarita, TX. Radar-confirmed hail track and contractor lead lists available.
NWS WARNING AREA · Sarita Metro · Sep 26, 2025
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This storm generated 2 NWS alert zones. Pro access covers the complete storm track and all addresses across every zone.
Sarita, TX
Alert issued Fri, Sep 26 · 8:45 PM UTC
Lyford, TX
Alert issued Fri, Sep 26 · 9:33 PM UTC
Sarita, TX saw a concluded hail storm on 2025-09-26 with a maximum confirmed hail size of 1 inch. The event produced two NWS alerts during the afternoon and late afternoon across the Sarita area.
The first alert came at 3:45 PM CDT, with dual-polarization radar showing confidence in 1-inch hail. A second alert followed at 4:33 PM CDT with 1-inch hail tied to NWS warning-only confidence. The storm remained a multi-zone hail event across the warning area before ending later in the day.
Alert timing points to a storm that held organized hail production through the afternoon. The 3:45 PM CDT alert gave an early radar-derived signal. The 4:33 PM CDT alert kept the hail risk in place for the same general storm path. Both alerts covered the Sarita area on 2025-09-26.
One-inch hail can affect roofs, vents, soft metals, siding, and exterior trim. In a rural South Texas setting like Sarita, impacts often show up first on lightly sloped roofs, vehicle surfaces, and exposed equipment. Window screens, gutters, and HVAC fins can also show impact marks when the hail falls in a narrow but concentrated path.
For contractors, the key question is whether the hail fell in a compact swath or across a broader warning area. That distinction changes the inspection plan. A property on the edge of the storm path may show little or no damage. A property inside the tighter hail track may show repeated strike marks on multiple exterior surfaces.
Visible loss should be checked against exposure. Roof slope, age, existing wear, and building materials all affect what a 1-inch hail event leaves behind. On metal and painted surfaces, look for fresh dings and coating breaks. On composition shingles, inspect for bruising, granule loss, and displaced tabs. On low-slope systems, check seams, flashings, and penetrations where impact can concentrate.
Start with a fast exterior walk. Confirm roof age, slope, and material before documenting hail marks. In Sarita, storm motion and open terrain can leave damage uneven from one structure to the next. A house five blocks away may need a different assessment than a shop or outbuilding closer to the storm core.
Use the alert sequence to narrow the field route. The 3:45 PM CDT radar-confirmed alert and the 4:33 PM CDT warning-only alert mark the afternoon window when hail threat stayed elevated. Field crews should focus on roofing, vents, gutters, downspouts, soft metals, skylights, and vehicle fleets parked in the open. Photograph impact patterns at close range and from multiple angles. Note the date, time window, and structure type on every file.
Contractors working claims in this area should separate warning-area exposure from verified hail locations. A broad alert does not equal uniform strike coverage. Prioritize the homes and commercial sites closest to the strongest hail reports and use a consistent inspection checklist for each structure.
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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