Giant Hail 3-4 Inches 70mph Winds and EF2 Tornado Possible Near Fort Worth Bridgeport Gainesville Texas Sunday 4-7pm With 60% Storm Development Chance

Giant Hail 3-4 Inches 70mph Winds and EF2 Tornado Possible Near Fort Worth Bridgeport Gainesville Texas Sunday 4-7pm With 60% Storm Development Chance

FORT WORTH / NORTH TEXAS — Severe weather is possible across a focused zone of North Texas this Sunday afternoon between 4 and 7 p.m., with forecasters placing a 60% chance of the atmospheric cap breaking and dangerous storms firing — bringing the threat of giant hail, destructive winds, and a potentially strong isolated tornado to communities near Fort Worth, Bridgeport, and Gainesville.

60% Cap Break Chance Sunday 4 to 7 PM

The key factor controlling storm development this afternoon is the atmospheric cap — a layer of warm air that suppresses storm initiation. Forecasters are giving a 60% probability that this cap breaks during the 4 to 7 p.m. window, which would allow storms to fire rapidly and tap into significant storm energy already in place across the region.

If the cap holds, storms stay suppressed. If it breaks, the storms that develop could be intense and move quickly through populated areas west and northwest of the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex.

Giant Hail Up to 3-4 Inches the Primary Threat

The leading threat from any storms that develop Sunday afternoon is giant hail in the 3 to 4 inch plus range — larger than a baseball and capable of causing catastrophic damage to vehicles, rooftops, windows, and any exposed property within the storm’s path.

Radar imagery shows the most intense storm energy concentrated in a corridor spanning from north of Gainesville southward through Bridgeport and into the Fort Worth area, with that zone representing the highest impact risk if storms successfully initiate.

70mph Damaging Winds and Isolated EF2 Tornado Also Possible

Beyond hail, damaging winds exceeding 70 mph are listed as a co-equal primary threat from these storms. Wind gusts at this magnitude are capable of downing trees, snapping power lines, and causing significant structural damage to homes and buildings across affected communities.

Additionally, forecasters have not ruled out an isolated strong tornado — potentially reaching EF2 intensity — given the amount of storm energy available in the atmosphere. An EF2 tornado produces winds between 111 and 135 mph, capable of destroying well-built homes and turning debris into deadly projectiles.

Impacted Zone Covers Bridgeport, Gainesville, Denton and Fort Worth

The primary threat corridor highlighted on storm tracking maps circles a zone covering Bridgeport, Gainesville, Denton, and Fort Worth — with surrounding communities including Stephenville to the south and areas approaching the Dallas metro also falling within the broader watch area depending on storm movement.

Residents across this entire zone should monitor conditions closely throughout the afternoon and have a shelter plan ready well before the 4 p.m. window opens. Stay with GordonRamsayClub.com for the latest updates.

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