HailEvidence NWS storm records · per-address verification

HailEvidenceHurley, SD → 2026-05-17

Did it hail in Hurley, SD on May 17, 2026?

Yes — NWS storm reports document 1 hail report within 10 miles of Hurley, SD on May 17, 2026, with hail up to 1.00" (quarter size).

These are preliminary same-day SPC storm reports; the official Storm Events record for this date is compiled by NWS over the following weeks. This page updates when it lands.

1hail reports ≤ 10 mi
1.00"largest hail · quarter
4wind reports · max 60 mph
1tornado reports

Every recorded report near Hurley on 2026-05-17

Distances are from the Hurley city centroid. Times as recorded by the source (SPC reports are UTC). Showing the nearest 6.

DistanceTypeSize / speedTimeReported nearSource
3.3 mi Tornado UNK 21:06 UTC 2 W Davis, Turner SPC · preliminary
7.5 mi Wind 60 mph 21:14 UTC 1 S Chancellor, Turner SPC · preliminary
7.7 mi Wind speed n/a 21:09 UTC 3 E Parker, Turner SPC · preliminary
8.9 mi Wind speed n/a 21:15 UTC Chancellor, Turner SPC · preliminary
9.2 mi Wind 60 mph 20:47 UTC 9 W Hurley, Turner SPC · preliminary
9.4 mi Hail 1.00" (quarter) 21:17 UTC 2 W Lennox, Turner SPC · preliminary

3.3 mi, tornado: “Video via social media of brief gustnado. Location estimated. (FSD)”

7.5 mi, wind: “Via personal weather station. Exact time estimated via radar. (FSD)”

7.7 mi, wind: “Power poles snapped and irrigation pivots flipped near the intersection of 276th St and 456th Ave. Time estimated from radar. (FSD)”

8.9 mi, wind: “70 mph caused downed tree branches. (FSD)”

9.2 mi, wind: “Spotter estimated 50-60 mph winds along with half dollar size hail. (FSD)”

Was your property hit on 2026-05-17?

City-level reports won't settle a claim dispute — the question is what was recorded near your address. The verification report lists every NWS-recorded event within 1, 3 and 10 miles of a specific address, with this date highlighted as a plain-English finding, formatted for an insurance appeal.

Verify your address — $29 Hurley hail history
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.

sources: NOAA SPC page updated 2026-06-12