October 7, 2025 hail storm near Kingman, KS. Radar-confirmed hail track and contractor lead lists available.
NWS WARNING AREA · Kingman Metro · Oct 7, 2025
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Kingman, KS
2,506 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Tue, Oct 7 · 8:13 AM UTC
On 2025-10-07, Kingman, KS was hit by a concluded severe hail storm with a maximum verified hail size of 1.75 inches. The storm produced one NWS alert at 3:13 AM CDT, with radar and spotter verification in the warning area.
The storm crossed the Kingman area overnight into early morning on 2025-10-07. The single alert was issued at 3:13 AM CDT and carried a 1.75-inch hail threat. Radar data and spotter reports aligned on the same hail size. The warning area covered the storm path through the metro, and the event is now concluded.
The hail report was concentrated in a single zone. No additional alerts were issued for this event. The verified hail size places this storm in the range where roof impacts, siding marks, and exterior trim damage are common on exposed surfaces.
Hail at 1.75 inches is large enough to affect asphalt shingles, roof vents, gutters, window screens, and painted metal. Creased shingles, broken skylight covers, and dented soft metal are common inspection points after hail in this range. Vehicles parked outdoors can also show visible body panel and glass impact.
Damage patterns depend on roof age, slope, and construction type. Older shingles with prior wear can lose granules quickly. Flat and low-slope surfaces may show concentrated impact points near drains, seams, and edge metal. Siding, fence caps, and HVAC fins can also show strikes when hail reaches this size.
For field crews, the first pass should focus on roof slope transitions, ridge caps, flashing, and penetrations. Those areas often show the earliest signs of impact when hail reaches 1.75 inches. Secondary checks should cover gutters, downspouts, window screens, patio covers, and any exposed painted metal.
This storm should be treated as a hail claim lead with enough size to justify a prompt exterior inspection. Start with the roof system and document the condition of shingles, vents, pipe boots, and flashing. Check for bruising, granule loss, and impact marks on soft metal. If the property has skylights or solar equipment, include those in the initial walk-around.
Use the storm date and local timing when contacting property owners. The hail hit Kingman on 2025-10-07, with the verified alert at 3:13 AM CDT. That gives crews a clean event window for canvass notes, photo logs, and estimate packages. Focus on properties inside the warning area first, then narrow to the buildings with visible impact patterns.
Crews should also watch for hidden issues that do not show from the ground. Impacted shingles can hold together after a storm and fail later. Metal vents, gutters, and siding may show dents before roof loss becomes obvious. Interior checks are useful where skylights, attic spaces, or ceiling stains are reported.
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Try the Free Demo →For scheduling, separate roof damage leads from cosmetic exterior claims early. That keeps inspection routes efficient and helps prioritize homes with the most visible hail exposure. Record the hail size, the local date, and the verified alert time on every field note.
Review 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