HailEvidence NWS storm records · per-address verification

HailEvidenceLake Worth, TX → 2025-03-04

Did it hail in Lake Worth, TX on March 4, 2025?

Yes — NWS storm reports document 1 hail report within 10 miles of Lake Worth, TX on March 4, 2025, with hail up to 1.00" (quarter size).

1hail reports ≤ 10 mi
1.00"largest hail · quarter
6wind reports · max 105 mph

Every recorded report near Lake Worth on 2025-03-04

Distances are from the Lake Worth city centroid. Times as recorded by the source (SPC reports are UTC). Showing the nearest 7.

DistanceTypeSize / speedTimeReported nearSource
3 mi Wind 62 mph 04:56 local TARRANT, TARRANT Storm Events · final
5.9 mi Wind 74 mph 04:59 local TARRANT, TARRANT Storm Events · final
6.4 mi Wind 70 mph 05:05 local TARRANT, TARRANT Storm Events · final
7.5 mi Hail 1.00" (quarter) 05:03 local TARRANT, TARRANT Storm Events · final
8.5 mi Wind 64 mph 04:45 local PARKER, PARKER Storm Events · final
9.1 mi Wind 105 mph 05:10 local TARRANT, TARRANT Storm Events · final
9.1 mi Wind 75 mph 05:02 local TARRANT, TARRANT Storm Events · final

3 mi, wind: “A 62 mph wind gust was measured at the AWOS site at NAS JRB.”

5.9 mi, wind: “A 74 mph wind gust was measured at a CWOP site in western Fort Worth.”

6.4 mi, wind: “The City of Fort Worth responded to 40 fallen tree requests from high winds moving through the city.”

7.5 mi, hail: “An mPING report indicated quarter sized hail 2 miles northeast of Eagle Mountain.”

8.5 mi, wind: “RVs were overturned due to high winds near the 14500 block of White Settlement Rd in Parker County. One woman was injured and taken to the hospital.”

Was your property hit on 2025-03-04?

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 Lake Worth 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 NCEI page updated 2026-06-12