November 21, 2025 hail storm near Seguin, TX. Radar-confirmed hail track and contractor lead lists available.
NWS WARNING AREA · Seguin Metro · Nov 21, 2025
Intelligence Platform
StormSnipe Pro
Cancel anytime · No contracts
Billed monthly · Cancel anytime
What's included
Instant delivery
Every storm published within hours of NOAA confirmation.
Interactive Strike Map
Full radar-confirmed hail track on an interactive map.
Address CSV export
Every affected residential address, export-ready.
Smart alerts
Notified when a storm hits your area. Set zones once.
Nationwide coverage
All 50 states. No zone restrictions. No geographic caps.
Live pipeline
NOAA NEXRAD processed and delivered 24/7.
Seguin, TX
8,022 addresses in warning area
Alert issued Fri, Nov 21 · 5:23 AM UTC
A severe thunderstorm moved through Seguin, Texas, late on November 21, 2025, with spotter-verified hail and a radar + spotter verified warning area report near McQueeney. The storm produced hail up to 1 inch, with the earliest ground report coming in at 11:20 PM CST south of McQueeney.
The field report described dime-size hail and noted the timing was estimated from radar. That report placed the storm in the late evening window just before the 11:23 PM CST NWS alert for 1-inch hail. The warning area carried radar and spotter verification, which matched the storm’s observed hail core as it crossed the Seguin metro area.
The event stayed localized. The confirmed hail path was tied to a single storm in the Seguin area, with the strongest verified hail reports centered near McQueeney and the broader Seguin corridor. The storm had already concluded by the time the final alert was issued, and no additional hail reports were listed beyond the one spotter observation and the corresponding warning area alert.
The available field reports point to a narrow hail swath rather than broad wind or debris damage. The spotter report south of McQueeney confirmed dime-size hail at 11:20 PM CST, and the warning area alert at 11:23 PM CST raised the hail threat to 1 inch with radar and spotter support. That combination shows a short-lived surface impact centered on the Seguin-McQueeney corridor.
No tree fall, roof loss, shattered glazing, or widespread vehicle damage was included in the provided reports. For contractors, that usually means the first pass should focus on exposed surfaces that take repeated impacts in a brief hail core. Check ridge caps, soft metals, vents, window screens, patio covers, and roof slopes that faced the storm’s approach through the late evening hours.
The most useful field note is location. The report south of McQueeney puts the core impact just outside central Seguin, not across a broad metro footprint. Crews working claims in this event should separate storm-corridor addresses from the rest of the warning area and avoid assuming uniform hail exposure across all Seguin neighborhoods.
Start with the McQueeney side of the event. The only spotter report in the supplied data came from south of McQueeney, and it arrived before the 11:23 PM CST alert. That timing supports a short inspection window for the hardest-hit properties closest to the hail core. Homes and businesses just off the storm line are the first places to verify roof hits, window screens, HVAC tops, and light metal trim.
Do not treat the full Seguin warning area as a single damage field. The storm was tied to one verified hail event, and the ground report was specific to a location south of McQueeney. For claim triage, that means the first canvass should stay near the reported track rather than spread evenly across the metro map. Addresses farther from that line may have seen only light or intermittent hail exposure.
See exactly what you get.
Explore the full Springdale, AR Strike Map free – hail track, address overlay, and CSV download. No account required.
Try the Free Demo →Late-night storms in this part of Guadalupe County also create a documentation problem. Exterior damage is harder to see the next morning if surfaces are wet, shaded, or partially obscured. Crews should photograph impact marks before any cleanup, then document roof slopes, soft metal, and siding on the same visit. Keep the inspection sequence tight and repeatable across nearby properties so the hail footprint stays tied to the actual storm path.
For precise hail track data, view the Strike Map.
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