From the Michelin and GE Vernova plants in the city to the I-85 distribution corridor through Greer, Greenville County runs on big low-slope roofs — and NOAA logged 85 roofing-relevant storm events here over 2021-2025, including 2.25-inch hail and a Helene-era tornado. Southeast Commercial Roofing reroofs and storm-documents those buildings to carrier standard. Call (866) 487-8572.
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Roofing-relevant events (hail, thunderstorm/high wind, tornado) recorded in Greenville County by the NOAA Storm Events Database, 2021 through 2025 (2025 partial). Hail in inches diameter; wind in mph.
| Year | Hail | Wind | Tornado | Max hail (in) | Max wind (mph) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 0 | 6 | 1 | — | 60 mph |
| 2022 | 7 | 8 | 0 | 1.75″ | 55 mph |
| 2023 | 12 | 18 | 0 | 2.25″ | 55 mph |
| 2024 | 3 | 12 | 1 | 1.75″ | 60 mph |
| 2025 | 6 | 11 | 0 | 1.00″ | 50 mph |
Source: NOAA Storm Events Database (NCEI), 2021–2025. Counts reflect roofing-relevant event types only. See the full South Carolina storm dataset for all counties.
Greenville County is the population and economic anchor of the South Carolina Upstate, with the City of Greenville as county seat and Greer, Mauldin, Simpsonville, and Travelers Rest the principal incorporated municipalities. What makes it a serious commercial roofing market is the building stock: this is advanced-manufacturing and logistics country. Michelin North America is headquartered in Greenville; GE Vernova (formerly GE Power) operates one of the world's largest gas-turbine plants in the city; and the I-85 corridor through Greer hosts automotive and aerospace suppliers, the inland-port-fed distribution clusters, and Greenville-Spartanburg International Airport. Bosch and Fluor anchor the industrial parks, and the broader Upstate automotive supplier base — ZF among the regional names — extends across the I-85 corridor. Every one of those facilities sits on large low-slope roofs — hundreds of thousands of square feet of TPO, EPDM, and built-up membrane — where a leak over a production line or a cold-storage bay is a process-interruption problem, not just a maintenance one.
That building profile drives how we work the county. Industrial and distribution reroofs over occupied, running plants demand phasing — dry-in each zone before tear-off, night and weekend windows around shifts, and protection of rooftop process equipment, fume intakes, and exhaust. For scope detail see our industrial facility reroof and storage & warehouse roofing pages, and our commercial flat roofing overview for low-slope system selection.
Across 2021-2025 NOAA logged 85 roofing-relevant events in Greenville County — 28 hail, 55 wind, and 2 tornadoes — but the year that did the documented damage is 2023. That year alone carried 18 thunderstorm-wind events with roughly $450,000 in total logged property damage, including a 2-JUL-23 wind line at $100,000 and additional damaging events on 16-MAY-23 and 06-JUN-23. The same year produced the county's largest hail of the entire period: 2.25 inches — between golf-ball and tennis-ball size — alongside 12 separate hail events. For low-slope commercial roofs that is the dangerous combination: a heavy wind season that loosens fasteners and lifts edge metal, layered with a hail year large enough to bruise even relatively new single-ply membrane.
Hail above 1.0 inch (quarter size) commonly damages aged TPO and EPDM; at 2.25 inches the impact energy reaches essentially every membrane type, including newer assemblies. The trouble is that hail bruising is frequently invisible from the parking lot — it shows up as fractured mat, displaced granules on modified bitumen, or subsurface moisture that only surfaces in core samples and infrared moisture mapping. If a Greenville-area building was under the 2023 hail cores, a documented field inspection is warranted regardless of how the roof reads from the ground, both to catch active leaks early and to preserve the claim record before deterioration muddies cause-of-loss.
Greenville County sat on the western flank of Hurricane Helene as it tracked north in late September 2024 (FEMA disaster declaration DR-4829-SC, which named Greenville County). NOAA's 2024 file for the county shows a confirmed tornado on 25-SEP-24 carrying a $5,000 logged damage estimate, plus twelve thunderstorm-wind events to 60 mph — including a 24-SEP-24 wind line with $150,000 in recorded damage as the leading edge moved through. In the data table the storm appears as ordinary 2024 wind and tornado rows; we keep it labeled that way because the claim file should match the source record an adjuster can pull, while owners know the event by Helene's name.
For low-slope commercial roofs the Upstate's Helene exposure was a wind-driven-rain and uplift event, not a hail event. It attacks perimeter and corner attachment zones first — exactly where mechanically-attached single-ply is most vulnerable — lifts edge metal, opens seams, and pushes water under flashings and at penetrations. Many buildings did not fail catastrophically during the storm; they developed loosened fasteners and slow leaks that surfaced over the following months. Those latent claims are still working through carriers, and where multiple 2024 perils touched one roof, cause-of-loss separation becomes the entire negotiation. See denied commercial roof claims in South Carolina for how we handle an underpaid or rejected Upstate claim.
Permitting for a commercial reroof in Greenville County depends on where the building sits. Inside the City of Greenville, permits and inspections run through the City of Greenville Building & Permit Center; in Greer, Mauldin, Simpsonville, and the other incorporated municipalities the city's building department is the authority having jurisdiction; and in unincorporated areas, Greenville County Building Safety issues the permit. All of them enforce the South Carolina Building Code (based on the International Building Code) with state energy-code insulation requirements that frequently trigger on a full tear-off — a code upgrade that often becomes a covered ordinance-and-law line on a storm claim rather than an out-of-pocket cost. We pull permits, coordinate inspections, and itemize code-driven upgrades separately so an adjuster can evaluate them cleanly. We follow NRCA detailing standards and OSHA 29 CFR 1910.28 fall-protection requirements on every Upstate project.
On the claim side, our adjuster-ready package includes drone imagery of the full roof with annotated damage, core-sample photography showing the existing system and damage cross-section, infrared or electrical-conductance moisture mapping, decking inspection, and a scope-of-work cost breakdown in carrier-preferred format — paired with RCV/ACV and depreciation worksheets. The RCV versus ACV distinction is especially live on older Upstate industrial roofs: Replacement Cost Value reimburses full replacement, while Actual Cash Value subtracts depreciation for age and condition, and on a heavily-depreciated 20-year membrane the gap runs into the hundreds of thousands. We document both scopes so ownership sees the real recovery picture. As an SC LLR-licensed commercial contractor based in Flat Rock, NC — about 35 miles north of Greenville — we serve Greenville County and the broader NC, SC, GA, and TN footprint. For metro-level service see Greenville, SC commercial roofing, the South Carolina commercial roofing overview, or the full South Carolina storm dataset. Call (866) 487-8572 for an assessment.
We reroof industrial, distribution, and manufacturing facilities across Greenville County and the SC Upstate, and document storm and wind damage to carrier standard — drone imagery, infrared moisture survey, core samples, detailed adjuster-ready scope. 24/7 emergency response.