Real hail reports from NOAA / National Weather Service covering the last 30 days. Updated continuously as new reports come in. Built by RidgeLink for door-knocking storm-restoration roofers — free for everyone.
Every dot is a hail report logged by NOAA / NWS in the last 30 days, color-coded by stone size. Bigger dots and darker colors mean larger hail — which usually means more insurance claims and more leads to chase.
The map covers Nashville, Franklin, Brentwood, Hendersonville, Murfreesboro, and the surrounding Middle Tennessee region.
For most insurance carriers, 1.5" or larger hail is the rough threshold for a full roof replacement claim. Anything smaller usually triggers a partial repair claim or gets denied outright. Knocking neighborhoods that took 1.5"+ stones — within a week or two of the storm, before competitors arrive — is the highest-yield strategy in storm restoration.
The pattern is simple:
RidgeLink does all of this in one place — this same map plus your team's lead pipeline plus drag-and-drop status tracking. Start a 30-day free trial to try it.
NOAA's National Weather Service collects hail reports from trained spotters, public submissions, and 911 calls. They're published in real-time as Local Storm Reports (LSRs). RidgeLink pulls the latest reports for Nashville directly from the Iowa Environmental Mesonet's public IEM data feed.
The reports are not exhaustive — small or rural events sometimes don't get reported — but they're the most reliable public dataset for storm-restoration roofers in the United States.
This map + your drag-and-drop pipeline + your team in real-time. Built for storm-restoration door-knockers. $79/month flat for up to 10 seats. 30 days free.
Start your free trial →