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Nebraska Hailstorms Map: 24,253 Events From 1955 to 2024

Nebraska has recorded 24,253 hail events from 1955 to 2024, placing the state in the top 5 nationally (rank #4 of 50). The largest hailstone documented in Nebraska measured 7 inches — softball-sized. Since 1996, the National Weather Service has logged approximately $796.4M in property and crop damage from Nebraska hail, with the heaviest activity concentrated in June (7,397 events, the state’s busiest hail month) and the most active period (events per year) being 2000-09.

The interactive map below plots every recorded Nebraska hail report from the NOAA Storm Prediction Center archive. Use the Min Size buttons to focus on damaging hail (1.75″ golf-ball and larger), or filter by Era to see how activity has shifted over the decades.

Interactive Nebraska Hail Storm Map

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4″+ Softball
2.75″ Baseball
1.75″ Golf Ball
1″ Quarter
Under 1″
1955-2024 – Source: NOAA SPC
Data: NOAA / ESRI

Nebraska hail by the numbers

MetricNebraska value
Total recorded hail events (1955-2024)24,253
National rank (event volume)#4 of 50 states
Largest hailstone on record7″ (softball-sized)
Busiest monthJune (7,397 events)
Most active period (events/year)2000-09
Total recorded damage (1996+)$796.4M
Hail-related injuries (1996+)69

10 largest hailstones ever recorded in Nebraska

These are the top ten hail reports in Nebraska ranked by hailstone diameter. Sizes are NOAA’s measured-or-estimated diameter at time of report.

DateHail sizeComparisonReported damageCasualties
2003-06-227″softball-sized
1990-06-126″softball-sized
2022-05-296″softball-sized
2002-06-125″softball-sized15 injured
2002-06-125″softball-sized
2002-06-125″softball-sized
1967-06-275″softball-sized
1976-07-305″softball-sized
1978-04-075″softball-sized
1991-05-105″softball-sized

Costliest Nebraska hailstorms since 1996

Property loss totals come from the National Weather Service’s Storm Events Database. Pre-1996 figures are excluded because the dataset used categorical loss codes rather than dollar amounts before that year.

DateHail sizeProperty + crop lossCasualties
2024-06-292.75″$25.0M + $75.0M crop
2024-06-294″$25.0M + $1.0M crop
2023-09-212.75″$15.0M
2022-06-072.5″$12.0M
2017-06-132.5″$10.0M + $250K crop

Hail size distribution in Nebraska

How Nebraska’s 24,253 hail events break down by hailstone size. Hail under 1″ is treated as marginally severe; the National Weather Service issues severe-thunderstorm warnings starting at 1″ (quarter size).

Hailstone sizeEventsShare of Nebraska total
Under 1″ (pea to dime)7,23429.8%
1.00-1.74″ (quarter)10,13941.8%
1.75-1.99″ (golf ball)4,46918.4%
2.00-2.74″ (egg / hen-egg)1,2665.2%
2.75-3.99″ (baseball)9594.0%
4.00″+ (softball or larger)1860.8%

Activity by decade

Recorded hail events have risen across most US states over the decades — partly because of more severe weather, but largely because of vastly improved spotter networks, mobile reporting, and dual-polarisation radar coverage that came online widely after 2010. The events-per-year column normalises the 45-year pre-2000 bucket against the modern 10-year and 5-year periods so the trend is comparable.

PeriodTotal eventsEvents per year
Pre-2000 (1955-99)6,348141
2000-098,181818
2010-197,156716
2020-242,568514

When Nebraska’s hail season peaks

Nebraska’s hail activity by calendar month, summed across all years from 1955 to 2024.

MonthEvents
January1
February14
March492
April1,904
May5,022
June7,397
July4,644
August3,047
September1,317
October368
November38
December9

Where Nebraska fits in the US hail picture

Nebraska sits firmly inside what meteorologists call Hail Alley — the high-frequency hail corridor running from northern Texas through Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska and the eastern Plains. The ingredients are the same wherever the alley runs: warm moist air pulled up from the Gulf of Mexico colliding with cold dry air spilling east off the Rockies, capped by a strong mid-level jet. That setup builds the deep, rotating supercells that loft hailstones high enough to grow to baseball- and softball-size before they fall.

Compare Nebraska’s hail risk with its neighbours: South Dakota hail, Iowa hail, Missouri hail, Kansas hail, Colorado hail, Wyoming hail.

Frequently asked questions about Nebraska hailstorms

What is the largest hailstone ever recorded in Nebraska?

According to NOAA Storm Prediction Center data, the largest measured hailstone in Nebraska was 7 inches in diameter — softball-sized. The map above plots that event along with every other hail report on file for the state.

When does Nebraska get the most hail?

June is Nebraska’s busiest hail month, with 7,397 recorded events — the highest single-month total in the state’s NOAA record. Most Nebraska hail falls in the spring and early-summer convective season; you can see the full month-by-month breakdown in the seasonality table above.

Where in Nebraska does hail occur most often?

Use the interactive map above to identify the highest-density hail corridors. Pan, zoom and click any point to see the date, size and reported damage for that event. Patterns vary across Nebraska — in many states the heaviest activity clusters along specific corridors driven by local terrain, lake effects, or jet-stream positioning.

Is Nebraska’s hail activity getting worse?

Roughly steady or modestly declining in the recent record — but interpret the trend with care. The recorded count has risen across nearly every state because spotter networks, mobile reporting apps, and dual-polarisation radar all expanded dramatically after about 2010. So a rising count partly reflects better detection rather than purely worse weather. The size-distribution and damage tables above are slightly less affected by this reporting bias.

How is hail size measured?

Reports use estimated maximum hailstone diameter in inches, usually compared to common objects: 0.75″ (penny), 1″ (quarter, the severe threshold), 1.75″ (golf ball), 2″ (egg), 2.75″ (baseball), 4″ (softball). The largest verified US hailstone, recorded in Vivian, South Dakota in 2010, measured 8 inches across.

Data sources and limitations

All hail event data on this page comes from the NOAA Storm Prediction Center SVRGIS dataset, accessed via an Esri feature service. The dataset contains over 400,000 individual US hail reports from 1955 to 2024. Property and crop loss values are recorded in actual dollar amounts from 1996 onward (categorical codes were used pre-1996, so loss totals on this page exclude those earlier years). Hailstone sizes are reported as measured-or-estimated maximum diameters; report density is influenced by population, road networks, and the modernisation of spotter networks over time.

Related Mapscaping resources: US Hailstorms map (national hub) · NOAA Storm Reports map (tornadoes, hail and wind)

About the Author
I'm Daniel O'Donohue, the voice and creator behind The MapScaping Podcast ( A podcast for the geospatial community ). With a professional background as a geospatial specialist, I've spent years harnessing the power of spatial to unravel the complexities of our world, one layer at a time.