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HailTrace vs Interactive Hail Maps: Which One Wins?

HailTrace vs Interactive Hail Maps: Which One Wins?

By StormIntel Team 9 min read
847+ contractors 4.9/5 rating $20.1M+ revenue tracked 30-day guarantee

You've narrowed it down to HailTrace or Interactive Hail Maps. Both have been around forever. Both have great marketing. Both cost real money.

The problem: every comparison online is either an affiliate review or written by one of the two companies pretending to be neutral.

The fix: Here's the honest breakdown from a company that works alongside both — including where each one falls short and which one your specific use case should actually pay for.

If you're shopping HailTrace vs Interactive Hail Maps, you're a roofing contractor or insurance pro trying to figure out which of the two leading hail data subscriptions actually delivers more closed jobs per dollar. Both have been around for over a decade. Both produce solid hail data. They cost very different amounts and they each have a clear strength.

Here's the honest comparison — including where each one falls short and how StormIntel fits in (we work alongside both, so this isn't a hit piece on either).

Quick Comparison Table

Factor HailTrace Interactive Hail Maps (IHM)
Starting price (2026)$94/mo ($1,128/yr)$999/yr (basic)
Top tier$260/mo ($3,120/yr)$1,999/yr
Data freshnessReal-time / liveUpdated after storm
Historical depth~10 years15+ years
Street-level resolutionYesYes (top tier)
Mobile appStrongWeb-first, mobile OK
ZIP scoring / deployment planningNoNo
Best forReal-time chase teamsHistorical analysis, claims

HailTrace: The Real-Time Chase Tool

HailTrace's signature strength is speed. Their data pipeline pulls from radar in near-real-time, so when a storm is forming you can watch the hail path develop live on their map. For a sales team that wants to be on the road before the storm even clears, HailTrace gives you that visibility.

What HailTrace does well

Where HailTrace falls short

Interactive Hail Maps (IHM): The Historical Analysis Tool

IHM's strength is depth — they have one of the deepest hail event archives in the industry, going back 15+ years. Insurance teams, public adjusters, and contractors doing historical canvassing love this because you can pull data on any storm in the modern era and overlay it on a specific address.

What IHM does well

Where IHM falls short

HailTrace vs IHM Head-to-Head

For real-time storm chasing: HailTrace wins. The live radar integration and mobile app are built for this use case.

For historical research and claims documentation: IHM wins. Their archive depth and report formatting are stronger.

For pure cost: It depends on usage. If you only need data during the 4-6 month storm season, HailTrace's monthly pricing might come out cheaper. If you need year-round access, IHM's annual fee is usually less.

For new contractors not sure which to pick: IHM's lower entry tier ($999/yr) is the safer first purchase — you get historical depth without committing to ongoing monthly bills.

What Neither Tool Does (And Where StormIntel Fits)

HailTrace and IHM are both map tools. They show you where it hailed. They do not tell you:

That's the gap StormIntel fills. We pull the same NOAA, radar, and hail report data that HailTrace and IHM use — and layer on housing data, roof age estimates, ZIP scoring, and a deployment plan you can hand to your crews. Critically, we're priced per-storm (a one-time $299/$399/$499 fee tied to a specific event), not as an ongoing subscription.

Most contractors we work with keep their HailTrace or IHM subscription for general visibility and add StormIntel on big events when they need the full deployment plan. See our deeper comparisons of StormIntel as a HailTrace alternative and StormIntel vs HailPoint for context.

How to Decide

Quick decision framework:

For the broader landscape of hail tools and what to evaluate, see our 5 best hail prospecting tools for 2026.

The Bottom Line

HailTrace and IHM are both good products with different strengths. HailTrace is the real-time chase tool. IHM is the historical and claims tool. Neither replaces the other, and neither tells you what to actually do with the hail data they show you. That last part — the deployment plan — is where StormIntel comes in, and where most contractors find the actual ROI lives.

Pick HailTrace or IHM based on whether you chase storms live or analyze them historically. Then layer in StormIntel when the storm is big enough to justify the deployment plan.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is HailTrace or Interactive Hail Maps better for roofing contractors?

HailTrace is better for real-time storm chasing — live radar tracking and mobile-first apps make it ideal for crews deploying during active storms. Interactive Hail Maps (IHM) is better for historical analysis and insurance claims — their 15+ year archive and address-level reports are stronger for documentation work. Most active contractors who do both end up using both, plus StormIntel for deployment planning.

How much does HailTrace cost in 2026?

HailTrace pricing in 2026 starts at $94/month ($1,128/year) for the basic plan and goes up to $260/month ($3,120/year) for the top tier with polygon export and advanced alerting features. Pricing is monthly subscription, charged year-round whether or not storms are active.

How much does Interactive Hail Maps cost?

Interactive Hail Maps starts at $999/year for the basic annual plan and goes up to about $1,999/year for the Pro tier with unlimited address reports and full archive access. Some entry-level usage is also offered on a per-report basis.

What's the main difference between HailTrace and Interactive Hail Maps?

Data freshness. HailTrace shows hail events in near-real-time as storms develop, which is ideal for chase teams. IHM updates after the storm but maintains a much deeper historical archive (15+ years), making it stronger for claims documentation and historical canvassing.

Can I use HailTrace or IHM data for an insurance claim?

Yes, both produce data that insurance adjusters accept as third-party storm verification. IHM is particularly well-known for this — their address-level PDF reports are formatted for claim submission and adjusters recognize the format. HailTrace data is also valid but typically requires more interpretation when submitting to a carrier.

Is there a cheaper alternative to HailTrace and IHM?

StormIntel offers pay-per-storm pricing ($299-$499 one-time per storm event) which is cheaper than either ongoing subscription if you only need data for a handful of storms per year. StormIntel also adds ZIP scoring, deployment planning, and market value estimation — features neither HailTrace nor IHM provide. Most contractors keep their HailTrace or IHM subscription and add StormIntel for big events.

Storm Season Is Here

Higher Close Rate. Less Windshield Time.

StormIntel tells you exactly which streets in which ZIPs have real, current-storm damage — so your inspectors stop wasting daylight on old claims and tire-kickers.

Subscriptions start at $1,800/yr $299 one-time per storm
  • ZIP-level damage severity scoring
  • Ranked street lists for inspectors
  • Built for inspection-first sales teams
  • 30-day money-back guarantee
Basic $299 · Pro $399 · Elite $499
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