HailEvidence NWS storm records · per-address verification

HailEvidencehail history → Lake St. Louis, MO

Lake St. Louis, MO hail history

Every figure below is from the NOAA NCEI Storm Events Database — the official NWS record — counting events recorded within 10 miles of the Lake St. Louis city centroid, 1950 to present.

227hail events since 1950
131≥ 1.00" (quarter) or larger
3.00"largest on record · 2024-03-14
2025-05-16most recent hail event

Hail by year — last 15 years

YearHail events ≤ 10 miLargest hail
2026 0
2025 27 2.50" (tennis ball)
2024 6 3.00" (tea cup)
2023 3 1.50" (ping pong ball)
2022 1 1.00" (quarter)
2021 3 1.75" (golf ball)
2020 2 1.50" (ping pong ball)
2019 5 1.25" (half dollar)
2018 1 0.75" (penny)
2017 1 1.00" (quarter)
2016 7 1.75" (golf ball)
2015 3 1.00" (quarter)
2014 7 1.00" (quarter)
2013 2 0.88" (nickel)
2012 22 3.00" (tea cup)

Note: the current and prior year reflect the latest NCEI compile and grow as NWS finalizes reports; same-day activity appears on this site's storm-day pages before it reaches this table.

Wind and tornado record

Most recent recorded events

DateTypeMagnitudeDistance
2025-07-06 Thunderstorm Wind 58 mph 9 mi
2025-05-16 Hail 1.00" 8 mi
2025-05-16 Hail 2.00" 7.9 mi
2025-05-16 Hail 1.00" 7 mi
2025-05-16 Hail 1.75" 6.3 mi
2025-05-16 Hail 2.00" 7.5 mi
2025-05-16 Hail 1.50" 8.4 mi
2025-05-16 Hail 1.25" 6.7 mi
2025-05-16 Hail 2.00" 8.1 mi
2025-05-16 Hail 1.25" 9.1 mi

2025-07-06: “Thunderstorm winds downed multiple tree limbs on Parkwood Drive. In the Park Charles neighborhood, thunderstorm winds caused lots of damage to trees and knocked out the power.”

2025-05-16: “Hail persisted for 10 or more minutes.”

2025-05-16: “Golf ball sized hail 3ENE of our office specifically.”

Disputing a claim at a Lake St. Louis address?

This page covers the city. A claim dispute needs the record around your address: every NWS-recorded event within 1, 3 and 10 miles, the disputed date highlighted, citations formatted for an insurance appeal.

Verify an address — $29
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.

source: NOAA NCEI Storm Events computed 2026-06-12