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St. Paul and Roseville Hail Damage Roof Inspections After the June 19 Storm

Northern St. Paul, Roseville, Falcon Heights, and Little Canada saw some of the largest June 19 hail reports in the Twin Cities. Here is what homeowners should inspect next.

Large hail crossed the north side of St. Paul

Large hail reference image for St. Paul hail damage inspections
Photo note: abr hail reference image from the st. Paul service area, used to show the size of hail that can damage shingles, vents, gutters, siding, and soft metals.

The June 19, 2026 afternoon storm was not just a quick summer downpour. The National Weather Service Twin Cities summarized a hail and wind event that moved from central Minnesota toward the Twin Cities and western Wisconsin, with one of the hardest-hit corridors running along the I-94 and 694 loop. Preliminary NOAA/SPC reports listed repeated hail reports in Roseville, Falcon Heights, Little Canada, northern St. Paul, and Maplewood, including several reports larger than golf ball size.

For homeowners searching for St. Paul hail damage roof inspection or roofing contractor St. Paul MN, the important next step is not guessing from the driveway. Hail can bruise shingles without knocking granules loose in a way that is obvious from the ground. It can also dent ridge caps, turbine vents, box vents, gutters, downspouts, fascia wrap, window screens, and siding.

Why Roseville, Falcon Heights, and Little Canada should be checked

The preliminary storm reports were tightly clustered around Roseville, Falcon Heights, Little Canada, and the north side of St. Paul. That matters because the same storm core can leave one block with visible damage and the next block with hidden shingle bruising. Homes near Highway 36, Rice Street, Maryland Avenue, Snelling, Lexington Parkway, and the Como/Falcon Heights corridor should be treated as inspection-priority areas.

Our current routing context already includes St. Paul work near the Maryland Avenue and Lexington Parkway corridors, which makes this an efficient area for All Built Right Exteriors to inspect after this storm. We do not publish customer addresses, but we do use real job geography internally to group inspections and reduce response time.

What we check after a St. Paul hailstorm

  • Shingle bruising, mat fracture, and exposed fiberglass
  • Soft metal dents on vents, gutters, downspouts, and flashing
  • Siding impact marks and chipped paint around elevations facing the storm
  • Window screens, wraps, and trim dents
  • Photo documentation useful for an insurance conversation

If you are in St. Paul, Roseville, Falcon Heights, or Little Canada and saw hail collecting on the ground, schedule the inspection before normal rain hides the evidence. Start with our hail damage inspection page or the St. Paul roof inspection page.

Storm source note: this article references the National Weather Service Twin Cities summary for the June 19, 2026 afternoon hail and wind event and preliminary NOAA/SPC storm reports. Storm reports are preliminary and should be used as inspection-routing guidance, not as a final claim determination.

Source links: NWS Twin Cities event summary and NOAA/SPC preliminary hail CSV.

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Schedule a free inspection with All Built Right Exteriors or call 612-246-7079.