On 2026-06-05, NOAA SPC 2026-06-05 reports logged hail up to 2.00″ reported across Marion, IA. The morning after, Roofbird ran its AI-vision pipeline over current satellite imagery of the impact zone — scanning 456 buildings, isolating 414 residential structures, scoring 10 roofs, and flagging the 10 below as showing the clearest replacement-grade wear.
2 of the 10 flagged roofs read as asphalt shingles, 2 as architectural asphalt shingles, and 3 were rated "moderately aged". Average roof score across the set is 4.5/10, and 1 clears a high-likelihood bar (score ≥ 8 or buy-probability ≥ 75) — the doors worth knocking first.
Estimated replacement jobs in this batch run from $2.5K to $90K, averaging roughly 31 squares of roof. Flagged addresses cluster around Knoxville. Every address, score, and damage note on this page is open — no signup — so you can verify any roof against your own eyes on Street View.
The damage signals the vision model surfaced most often across Knoxville County, IA: large blue tarp or covering clearly visible over the upper building structure, consistent with active roof damage requiring emergency covering (1), white flat-roof section on lower building shows uneven tonal variation and possible surface weathering (1), structures appear to be in a rural/agricultural setting with limited maintenance evidence (1), possible debris or equipment scatter visible around the structures (1), and uneven tonal variation across the main roof surface, consistent with possible granule loss or differential weathering (1). These are the visible cues that separate a roof nearing end-of-life from one with years left — the same read a seasoned estimator makes from the curb, run across every home in the storm footprint at once.