Washington County, CO hail map

Every NOAA hail report in Washington County, Colorado from the last 12 months — 33 reports, largest 4.5". Updated daily from Storm Prediction Center data.

Last 365 days33 hail reports
under 1" 1–2" 2"+Source: NOAA SPC storm reports
11
Reports, 30 days
33
Reports, 12 months
4.5"
Largest hail, 12 mo
Jun 25
Last report

Recent hail reports in Washington County

DateHail sizeCoordinates
Jun 251.5"39.900, -103.220
Jun 251.0"39.940, -103.280
Jun 241.75"40.000, -103.440
Jun 241.5"40.000, -103.460
Jun 241.5"39.870, -103.600
Jun 231.0"39.610, -103.570
Jun 232.0"39.650, -102.840
Jun 232.0"39.660, -102.850
Jun 233.5"39.760, -102.840
Jun 221.5"40.400, -103.090
Jun 201.5"39.870, -103.600
Jun 12.0"39.980, -103.460
May 301.0"40.160, -103.260
May 301.5"40.170, -103.210
May 214.5"39.650, -103.500

Showing the 15 most recent of 33 reports in the last 12 months.

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Hail activity in other Colorado counties

Washington County hail FAQ

When did it last hail in Washington County, CO?

The most recent NOAA hail report in Washington County was on Jun 25 with 1.5" hail. Every report from the last 12 months is listed above.

How much hail does Washington County get?

Washington County recorded 33 official NOAA hail reports in the last 12 months. The largest stone was 4.5".

Was the hail in Washington County big enough to damage roofs?

One-inch hail (quarter size) is the standard damage threshold for asphalt shingles, and Washington County has seen hail up to 4.5" in the last 12 months — large enough to bruise shingles and cause granule loss that surfaces as leaks months later.

How do roofing contractors use this hail data?

After a hail event, contractors canvass the hit area — but knocking blind wastes crew hours. Roofbird scores every roof in a hit ZIP code from satellite imagery and returns a ranked list of the homes most likely needing replacement, with the owner's name and DNC-scrubbed phone number on unlock.