New Hanover is North Carolina's coastal hurricane front — Wilmington, Wrightsville Beach, and the Cape Fear port took direct hits from Florence in 2018 and Isaias in 2020. Even between named storms, NOAA logged 29 thunderstorm and high-wind events here from 2021 to 2025, gusting to 67 mph. On a low-slope commercial roof, that wind finds edges and corners first. Southeast Commercial Roofing engineers and documents coastal roof systems to carrier and code standard. Call (866) 487-8572.
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Roofing-relevant events (hail, thunderstorm/high wind, tornado) recorded in New Hanover County by the NOAA Storm Events Database, 2021 through 2025 (2025 partial). Hail in inches diameter; wind in mph. This window does not include Hurricane Florence (2018) or Isaias (2020).
| Year | Hail | Wind | Tornado | Max hail (in) | Max wind (mph) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 1.00″ | 51 mph |
| 2022 | 0 | 7 | 0 | — | 67 mph |
| 2023 | 0 | 7 | 1 | — | 54 mph |
| 2024 | 3 | 11 | 0 | 1.00″ | 63 mph |
| 2025 | 0 | 3 | 1 | — | 53 mph |
Source: NOAA Storm Events Database (NCEI), 2021–2025. Counts reflect roofing-relevant event types only. See the full North Carolina storm dataset for all 100 counties.
Most inland Carolina counties tell a hail story. New Hanover County tells a wind story. Across 2021-2025 NOAA logged 36 roofing-relevant events in the county — and 29 of them were wind. Hail appeared only five times, never above 1.0 inch (quarter size), the threshold where impact damage to aged single-ply membranes begins. The signature here is repeated thunderstorm and high-wind loading, peaking at a 67 mph gust in 2022, plus two confirmed tornadoes — one in 2023 and one in July 2025 that carried a $10,000 logged damage estimate. For a flat or low-slope commercial roof, that profile points the inspection straight at the wind-load zones: perimeters, corners, edge metal, and curb flashings, not the field membrane.
This is the natural consequence of geography. New Hanover sits on the Atlantic at the mouth of the Cape Fear River, wrapping Wilmington, Wrightsville Beach, Carolina Beach, and Kure Beach. It is one of the most exposed commercial-building markets in the Carolinas — open fetch off the ocean, no inland terrain to slow a gust, and a salt-air environment that accelerates corrosion on fasteners and metal. A roof spec that works in the Piedmont is under-built here. Wind-rated edge metal, enhanced perimeter attachment, and marine-grade corrosion resistance are not upgrades on the coast; they are the baseline.
The 2021-2025 NOAA file is the disciplined, citable record for routine events, but it understates New Hanover County's true exposure because it begins after the county's two most destructive recent storms. Hurricane Florence made landfall near Wrightsville Beach in September 2018, parking over the Cape Fear region and producing some of the most severe wind and flood roof damage in the county's modern history. Two years later, Hurricane Isaias made landfall just southwest at Ocean Isle Beach in 2020, driving direct severe wind across New Hanover — the storm's highest gusts hit the county's beaches and left roughly 85,000 customers without power — while spawning tornadoes in the adjacent Brunswick County / Cape Fear area and stripping edge metal and membrane across commercial corridors. Owners and facility managers in Wilmington reference these storms the way Asheville references Helene — as the events of record that defined their buildings' vulnerabilities.
We raise this because coastal claims live and die on cause-of-loss precision. When a building has weathered multiple named storms, a carrier will probe whether current damage traces to an earlier, already-adjusted event or to pre-existing wear rather than the storm being claimed. The discipline that holds a New Hanover claim together is the same one we apply everywhere: match each damage signature — uplifted edge metal, opened seams, loosened fasteners, debris impact — to a specific dated event in the public NOAA record an adjuster can independently pull, and document the building-specific condition that the dollar-figure-blank NOAA entries leave open. Hail bruising, by contrast, is rarely the issue here; the membrane question on the coast is almost always wind and water.
New Hanover is small in land area but dense in commercial and industrial roof stock. The county anchors the Wilmington metro and the Port of Wilmington, a North Carolina State Ports container and bulk terminal that drives a corridor of warehouse, distribution, and logistics buildings — the exact flat-roof inventory most exposed to coastal wind uplift. Major industrial employers include GE Hitachi Nuclear Energy and Corning Incorporated, both operating sizable manufacturing footprints, alongside the PPD clinical research business of Thermo Fisher Scientific, fintech employers nCino and Live Oak Bank, and Novant Health New Hanover Regional Medical Center as the county's largest single employer. The University of North Carolina at Wilmington and Cape Fear Community College add an institutional campus base of low-slope and metal roofs.
That mix maps directly onto the verticals we build for: distribution and warehouse facilities around the port, industrial and manufacturing plants, pharma and biotech research space, and medical-office and institutional buildings. On port-adjacent logistics roofs especially, the priorities are large-field membrane performance under sustained wind, drainage sized for tropical rainfall volume, and edge-metal detailing that will not peel in a 70-mph-plus gust. We spec TPO, EPDM, modified bitumen, BUR, and standing-seam metal to the building's real coastal exposure rather than reinstalling whatever last failed.
Permitting in New Hanover County depends on where the building sits. The New Hanover County Building Safety / Permits & Inspections division enforces the North Carolina State Building Code in unincorporated areas and issues commercial shell and upfit permits through its COAST online portal; buildings inside the City of Wilmington are permitted by the City, and Carolina Beach, Kure Beach, and Wrightsville Beach each run their own offices. We identify and pull the correct authority having jurisdiction for every address and detail to current code — including the coastal high-wind provisions that govern edge metal, attachment, and uplift design on the New Hanover coastline. Reroofs frequently trigger ordinance-and-law upgrades to current NC energy-code insulation, which we itemize as a separate, often-covered line so an adjuster can evaluate it cleanly.
On the claim itself, our North Carolina adjuster-ready package includes drone imagery with annotated damage, core-sample photography showing the existing system and damage cross-section, infrared or electrical-conductance moisture mapping, decking inspection, and a carrier-format scope of work — paired with RCV/ACV and depreciation worksheets. The RCV versus ACV gap is especially live on older coastal roofs that have already absorbed years of salt and wind; on a heavily depreciated membrane, the difference between full replacement value and actual cash value can run into the hundreds of thousands. We document both scopes so ownership sees the real recovery picture. Fall-protection and edge work follow OSHA 29 CFR 1910.28, and our detailing aligns with NRCA coastal wind-design practice.
Southeast Commercial Roofing is an NCLBGC commercial contractor headquartered in Flat Rock, NC, serving New Hanover County and the broader NC, SC, GA, and TN footprint. If a facility was hit, start with our storm damage response and North Carolina insurance-claim workflows, review the full North Carolina storm dataset, or see the North Carolina commercial roofing overview for statewide context. Call (866) 487-8572 for a coastal roof assessment.
We respond to commercial roof wind, hurricane, and tornado damage across New Hanover County, Wilmington, and the Cape Fear coast. Adjuster-ready insurance documentation, drone imagery, infrared moisture survey, detailed carrier-ready scope, coastal high-wind systems. 24/7 emergency response.