October 14, 2025 hail storm near Sierra Blanca, TX. Radar-confirmed hail track and contractor lead lists available.
NWS WARNING AREA · Sierra Blanca Metro · Oct 14, 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.
Sierra Blanca, TX
Alert issued Tue, Oct 14 · 1:17 AM UTC
Clint, TX
53 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Tue, Oct 14 · 6:18 AM UTC
Sierra Blanca, TX saw a concluded hail event on 2025-10-14 with a peak confirmed hail size of 1.25 inches. The storm produced two NWS alerts and moved through the area in separate rounds overnight.
The first alert came at 8:17 PM CDT and carried a 1.25-inch hail threat under NWS warning-only confidence. A second alert followed at 1:18 AM CDT with a 1-inch hail threat and dual-polarization radar confidence. The sequence points to multiple hail-producing cores affecting the Sierra Blanca area during the evening and early morning hours.
The storm was concluded by the time this page was prepared. No additional alerts were listed after the second round.
Hail up to 1.25 inches can break weaker window glass, dent vehicle panels, and damage roof coverings. On metal roofs, the impact pattern often shows on ridges, vents, flashing, and exposed fasteners. On asphalt shingles, impact marks may appear around soft spots, edges, and aging sections where granule loss is already present.
A 1-inch hail round can add secondary damage even where the larger stones were not concentrated. Contractors should expect mixed field conditions across the warning area. One block may show visible roof scarring while another shows only scattered collateral issues on siding, screens, gutters, and HVAC housings.
In a multi-alert event like this one, damage checks should not assume one uniform hail size across the full storm path. The sequence of alerts suggests the hail threat changed over time, and the heaviest impact may have been confined to narrower corridors inside the broader warning area.
Field crews should start with a roof-by-roof exterior survey and log impact marks by surface type. Pay close attention to south- and west-facing slopes, soft metal trim, and roof features that catch direct strikes. Photograph dents, fractures, and granule loss before any cleaning or temporary repairs. On multi-zone claims, compare the visible damage pattern with the time window of each alert so the inspection record stays tied to the storm sequence.
Windows, skylights, condenser fins, and vehicle tops should be checked alongside the roof. Hail around 1.25 inches can create separate repair needs on the same property, and the smaller 1-inch round can leave lighter but still relevant marks that affect claim scope. Crews working the Sierra Blanca area should also watch for repeated impacts on the same structures if the property sat under both alert rounds.
For dispatch and estimating, separate cosmetic dents from functional damage early. That helps narrow crew time on site and keeps the inspection focused on roofs, attached structures, and exterior equipment most likely to need repair. Use consistent photo angles, note the local time of each observation, and keep address-level records tied to the specific storm pass.
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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