HailEvidence NWS storm records · per-address verification

HailEvidence → verification report

Every NWS storm record near your address. In your hands in 60 seconds.

When a claim gets disputed, the argument is always the same: “no hail was recorded at your address.” Nothing is recorded at your address — NWS records are point observations. The question is what was recorded near it. This report answers that, with citations.

What's in every report

Pick your report

$29standard report

10-year hail history + disputed-date finding. The report most homeowners need for a hail dispute.

Get the standard report
$49extended report

15-year window, wind & tornado records included, plus a drafted claim-appeal letter built from your report's findings (a labeled draft for you to edit — not legal advice).

Get the extended report

Pay → enter the address on the next page (coordinates work for rural properties) → the report appears instantly. Refund within 14 days on request, no questions. Terms.

Honest limits, up front: NWS records are point and path observations. The absence of a nearby report does NOT prove that no hail fell at this address — it means no observation was logged nearby. A report of nearby hail documents the event; it does not by itself prove damage to a specific structure.

Questions

Will this prove my roof was damaged by hail?

No — and be wary of anything that claims to. The report proves what the National Weather Service recorded near your address and when: hail sizes, wind gusts, distances, official narratives. NWS records are point and path observations. The absence of a nearby report does NOT prove that no hail fell at this address — it means no observation was logged nearby. A report of nearby hail documents the event; it does not by itself prove damage to a specific structure. What it gives you is the official storm history, formatted so an adjuster can verify every line.

What if there's no record of my storm?

The report says so honestly, shows the nearest records within ±3 days, and explains exactly what absence of a report does and does not mean. NWS records are point observations — plenty of real hail falls between them.

Where does the data come from?

Two NOAA sources, cited on every line: the NCEI Storm Events Database (the official record, 1950–present) and the Storm Prediction Center's daily storm reports (preliminary, same-day — for storms newer than the latest Storm Events compile). Every event links to its official record.

How fast do I get it?

Instantly. Pay, enter the address (and the disputed date if you have one), and the report appears with a permanent shareable link. A copy of the link is emailed to you.

Can I use it for an insurance claim appeal?

That's what it's built for: a methodology and citation section formatted as an attachment, and (on the Extended report) a drafted appeal letter you can edit and send yourself. It is your evidence to use; we are not adjusters or lawyers.

1,189,226 events on file Storm Events vintage c20260527 SPC loaded through 2026-06-11