Quarter sized hail near Capitol Hill - Photo courtesy of Debbie Butler - posted on facebook
On Monday, June 1, 2026, the first major hail storm of the season swept across Colorado's Front Range. Storms built fast along the I-25 corridor in the early afternoon, hammered the Denver metro with hail, and a second round of cells worked over the Colorado Springs area to the south before the whole system pushed onto the eastern plains by evening. I have been roofing Colorado homes since 1993, and I can tell you from experience that a storm like this one quietly damages thousands of roofs whose owners will not find out until a leak shows up months later.
This is the long version of the report: how the storm came together, exactly how big the hail got, what it does to a roof, how your insurance really works, and how to protect yourself from the scammers who follow every storm into town.
|
Date |
Monday, June 1, 2026 |
|
Onset |
Early afternoon; severe thunderstorm warning about 1:15 PM |
|
Largest hail reported |
1.75 inches (golf ball) |
|
Average hail reported |
1.21 inches |
|
Homes in one inch or larger swath |
More than 90,000 (Denver metro estimate) |
|
Metro impact rating |
3 (significant event) |
|
Areas affected |
Denver metro and the Colorado Springs region |
Colorado was primed for severe weather all day. Forecasters had flagged the Front Range and eastern plains for a risk of severe storms, with large hail, damaging wind, and even isolated landspout tornadoes in play. The day before, the National Weather Service had already confirmed tornadoes out in Yuma County, so the atmosphere was clearly active.
By early Monday afternoon, scattered thunderstorms fired right along the I-25 corridor. One cell intensified just south of Commerce City and prompted a severe thunderstorm warning for Denver, Adams, and western Arapahoe counties at about 1:15 PM, with radar indicating hail up to two inches. That storm tracked east at roughly 25 miles per hour, clipping northern Aurora, southwestern Thornton, southern Westminster, Commerce City, and Denver International Airport before rolling onto the plains. Farther south, separate storms brought hail to the Colorado Springs area. By evening, the threat had shifted east and the Front Range was in the clear.
Hail size is the single biggest factor in whether your roof is damaged, so it is worth looking at the numbers. Based on regional hail mapping, here is the estimated number of homes that fell inside each size band:
|
Reported Hail Size |
Estimated Metro Homes in Swath |
|
1.00 inch (quarter) |
90,844 |
|
1.25 inch (half dollar) |
52,261 |
|
1.50 inch (walnut) |
9,638 |
There were 13 confirmed on-the-ground reports across the region. The average reported stone was 1.21 inches and the largest was 1.75 inches, which is golf ball size. The Denver metro earned an impact rating of 3, which marks this as a significant event rather than a passing shower.
People often assume hail has to be the size of a baseball to do harm. That is not how it works. One inch is the size where things change. Here is roughly how common hail sizes line up:
With stones up to golf ball size in this storm, plenty of roofs in the path took hits hard enough to matter. The damage is rarely dramatic. It is bruising, cracking, and granule loss that you usually cannot see from the ground.
Quarter sized hail near Briargate in Colorado Springs - photo courtesy of Becky Dougherty - facebook
This storm covered a lot of ground. In the Denver metro, hail was reported across:
To the south, in the Colorado Springs area, hail was reported across:
Colorado Springs, Cimarron Hills, Black Forest, and the Air Force Academy
If your home sits anywhere in that path, it is worth a look.
hail damaged asphalt shingles
A single hail strike does several things at once, and most of them are invisible from your driveway:
The reason hail damage is so sneaky is that a bruised or de-granulated shingle can look almost normal from the street while its real lifespan has been cut by years.
You do not need to climb on the roof, and you should not. From the ground, look for:
If you see hits on the soft metal around your house, your roof almost certainly took them too.
Insurance is where a lot of homeowners get tripped up, so let me walk through how it usually works in Colorado. Every policy is different, so treat this as a map and not as legal advice, and always read your own coverage.
On a covered claim, you pay your deductible and your insurer covers the rest. If your damage does not add up to more than your deductible, there is nothing for them to pay, which is exactly why you want an inspection before you ever file.
Most modern policies are replacement cost value, but they often pay in two parts. First they send the actual cash value, which is the cost to replace your roof minus depreciation for its age and wear. After the work is finished and invoiced, they release the rest, called the recoverable depreciation. An actual cash value only policy pays the depreciated amount and stops there, which can leave a large gap you cover out of pocket. Know which kind you have.
Many Colorado policies require you to file within about one year of the date of loss. For this storm, that clock started on June 1, 2026. Waiting too long can cost you the claim entirely.
This is the part people get wrong. The moment you call to ask about possible hail, many insurers log it as a claim. If an adjuster then decides there is not enough damage to clear your deductible, the claim closes with no payout, but it can still land on your insurance history and follow you to your next renewal or even your next home. Get an independent inspection first so you know whether you actually have a claim worth filing before you ever pick up the phone.
After every big Colorado hail storm, out of state crews descend on the neighborhoods. Some are fine. Many are not. After more than 30 years in this business, here are the red flags I tell my own neighbors to watch for:
Work with a local company that will still be here next year, the next time you need them. Call Excel Roofing first.
Every hail season, we meet homeowners who waited. The leak they could have caught in June becomes a ceiling stain in December and a much bigger repair by spring. Catching damage early protects your home, keeps your claim clean, and gives you time to make a good decision instead of a rushed one. There is no prize for waiting it out.
If it feels like Colorado gets more than its share of hail, that is because it does. The Front Range sits in what is often called Hail Alley, where the rapid rise from the plains up to the mountains creates the perfect setup for the strong updrafts that grow hail. Our hail season runs roughly from April through September, and June is historically the busiest month of all. June 1 was an early and firm reminder of what the rest of the summer can bring.
We have been on Colorado roofs since 1993, and we have helped more than 55,000 homeowners get through storms just like this one. We are an Owens Corning Platinum Preferred Contractor, a credential held by only a small fraction of roofers in the country. We work out of our Englewood headquarters at 4510 S Federal Blvd and our Colorado Springs office at 2622 N Union Blvd, so wherever the June 1 storm hit, we are nearby.
Here is our promise. Our inspection is free. You don't pay a cent until you're content, and there are no upfront costs and no cancellation fees. Every job also comes with the things that should be standard but often are not, like a porta potty on site to keep your property clean and a carbon monoxide detector for your home. If you do not have damage, we will tell you so honestly. If you do, we will document it properly and walk you through your insurance the right way.
If the June 1 storm passed over your neighborhood, do not wait for a leak or a door knock to find out. Call us at (303) 761-6400 to schedule your free inspection. We're on top of it.
Sources
National Weather Service, Severe Thunderstorm Warning, Denver, June 1, 2026.
https://www.weatherbug.com/alerts/denver-co-80203
9NEWS, Stronger storms possible in Denver today and tomorrow, June 1, 2026.
https://www.9news.com/article/weather/severe-weather/severe-storms-chances-colorado-monday-forecast/73-19140c0e-6b26-4425-b1b5-20724d2665ce
FOX31 KDVR, Large hail could hit Colorado on Monday, June 1, 2026.
https://kdvr.com/weather/wx-news/large-hail-could-hit-colorado-on-monday-heres-where/
Interactive Hail Maps, Hail Map for Denver, CO, June 1, 2026.
https://maps.interactivehailmaps.com/HailMap/denver-co/2026-06-01
NOAA Hail Storm Reports, Colorado Geospatial Data.
https://geodata.colorado.gov/datasets/esri2::noaa-hail-storm-reports-24-hours/