Verified NWS Local Storm Reports

Pennsylvania Hail Storm — Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Every verified storm report NWS spotters filed in Pennsylvania on Wednesday, July 15, 2026 — hail up to 1.5" (ping pong ball size). The same ground-truth data insurance adjusters trust.

1.5"
Largest hail (ping pong ball)
1
Hail reports
1
Towns hit
0
Wind & tornado reports
1.5" hail — 2 E Lehighton, Carbon Co. (Jul 15, 2026)2 E Lehighton

Was a specific roof under this storm?

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Hail by town — Wednesday, July 15, 2026

2 E LehightonCarbon Co.1 reportmax 1.5"ping pong ball

All verified reports

Time (UTC)LocationEvent
9:26 PM2 E LehightonCarbon Co.1.5" hail

About this storm

How big was the hail in Pennsylvania on Wednesday, July 15, 2026?

The largest verified hail report that day measured 1.5" — ping pong ball sized. NWS spotters filed 1 hail reports across 1 towns.

Is that big enough to damage a roof?

Hail around 1" (quarter size) and up can bruise or crack asphalt shingles — that's the threshold insurance adjusters take seriously. Damage is often invisible from the ground, which is why an inspection matters even when the roof "looks fine."

How long do homeowners have to file a claim for this storm?

Most homeowner policies allow one to two years from the storm date — some as little as six months. This storm was 3 days ago, so the filing window is open for most policies.

How do I check if a specific address was hit?

Run a free roof report on Rooftops AI: type the address and you get the roof's measurements plus its verified hail history — every NWS-logged report near that exact property, with dates, sizes, and distances.

Data: NWS Local Storm Reports via Iowa Environmental Mesonet. Local Storm Reports are preliminary, spotter-submitted observations and may be revised by the National Weather Service. Rooftops AI is not affiliated with or endorsed by NOAA or the NWS. Insurance filing windows vary by policy and state — homeowners should confirm with their carrier.