Check Your Address
Storm history reports include hail size, date, wind events, and proximity to your property.
Your NOAA / SPC storm history is shown below — and we've emailed you a copy. A local roofing contractor will also review it and reach out within 1 business day to offer a free inspection.
Why check storm history?
Hail and high-wind events can damage a roof in ways you can't see from the ground — bruised shingles, granule loss, lifted seals, hairline cracks. Damage often shows up months or years later as leaks. Most insurance carriers will only pay a claim if there's documented storm activity at your address.
- Insurance claims — carriers cross-check your address against NOAA storm reports before approving a roof claim.
- Buying a house — storm history changes how much risk you're inheriting.
- Selling a house — documented "no hail" periods can support roof condition claims.
- Routine inspection — if your area got hit, even a roof that looks fine should be inspected.
Signs your roof was hit
About this report
Storm history is sourced from NOAA Storm Prediction Center (SPC) recent hail reports and locally cached NOAA/NCEI historical storm records when available. Reports include date, hail size, source, and proximity to your address. Reports are pulled by a licensed roofing contractor in our partner network — we do not store your address publicly or sell your contact information.
Are you a roofing contractor?
Get pre-qualified storm-damage leads in your area. EstimatorPRO matches homeowners checking hail history with contractors in their zip code. Included in every plan.