From Wikipedia - Reading time: 56 min
This page documents all tornadoes confirmed by various weather forecast offices of the National Weather Service in the United States in April 2025. Tornado counts are considered preliminary until final publication in the database of the National Centers for Environmental Information.[1] Based on the 1991–2020 average, about 182 tornadoes occur in the United States in April.[2] Activity also tends to spread northward and westward in April compared to the cooler winter months and the Midwest and Great Plains tend to see increased activity, although the relative maxima remains in the southern states.[3]
| EFU | EF0 | EF1 | EF2 | EF3 | EF4 | EF5 | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 | 36 | 83 | 33 | 7 | 0 | 0 | 162 |
| EF# | Location | County / parish | State | Start coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max. width |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EF0 | ENE of Salida | Stanislaus | CA | 37°43′N 121°03′W / 37.72°N 121.05°W | 21:13–21:15 | 0.9 mi (1.4 km) | 70 yd (64 m) |
| A tornado moved through several orchards and properties, uprooting dozens of almond trees and snapping large tree branches. Minor structure damage was observed on the properties, including a patio roof ripped off, a broken window, an outbuilding and metal fence were displaced and a large trailer was lifted and moved approximately 20 ft (6.1 m).[4] | |||||||
| EFU | NNW of Egin | Fremont | ID | 44°02′N 111°56′W / 44.04°N 111.93°W | 22:45 | [to be determined] | [to be determined] |
| A brief and weak tornado touched down northwest of the St. Anthony Sand Dunes, causing no reported damage.[5] | |||||||
| EF# | Location | County / parish | State | Start coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max. width |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EF1 | NW of Pawhuska | Osage | OK | 36°45′50″N 96°26′53″W / 36.764°N 96.448°W | 10:13–10:18 | 3.7 mi (6.0 km) | 250 yd (230 m) |
| Multiple power poles were snapped.[6] | |||||||
| EF1 | NE of Turley to Owasso to Limestone | Tulsa, Rogers | OK | 36°15′18″N 95°55′55″W / 36.255°N 95.932°W | 11:37–11:47 | 10.7 mi (17.2 km) | 600 yd (550 m) |
| A high-end EF1 tornado developed west of US 75, damaging trees and industrial buildings. It then moved northeast into Owasso, affecting several neighborhoods where homes were damaged, trees were uprooted, and power poles were snapped. The tornado continued into Rogers county, damaging roofs and snapping large tree limbs before dissipating after it destroyed an outbuilding in Limestone.[6] | |||||||
| EFU | ENE of Butler | Bates | MO | 38°18′N 94°16′W / 38.3°N 94.27°W | 12:02 | [to be determined] | [to be determined] |
| A tornado debris signature was noted on radar, but the area where it occurred was inaccessible, leading to an EFU rating. Preliminary information.[7] | |||||||
| EF0 | ENE of Butler to W of Johnstown | Bates | MO | 38°16′31″N 94°14′09″W / 38.2753°N 94.2358°W | 12:02–12:11 | 7.5 mi (12.1 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
| This high-end EF0 tornado touched down in an open field, causing minor damage to power poles, trees, and small outbuildings along its path. The tornado then damaged empty grain bins and some trees before lifting.[8] | |||||||
| EF2 | NW of Bronaugh to Moundville to SW of Nevada | Vernon | MO | 37°43′58″N 94°30′31″W / 37.7329°N 94.5087°W | 12:29–12:34 | 6.54 mi (10.53 km) | [to be determined] |
| A low-end EF2 tornado caused significant damage to a home southwest of Moundville. The tornado continued northeast, damaging several homes, barns, and numerous trees as it moved through Moundville and dissipated shortly after.[7][9] | |||||||
| EF1 | N of Bronaugh to Eastern Nevada to WNW of Walker | Vernon | MO | 37°43′29″N 94°27′08″W / 37.7246°N 94.4522°W | 12:30–12:44 | 16.62 mi (26.75 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
| This tornado touched down and tracked northeast, initially, causing damage to trees and barns. As it moved toward Nevada, it also damaged several homes and outbuildings. The tornado caused significant damage to numerous businesses as it crossed US 54 in Nevada and knocked over two sets of four railroad cars. The tornado continued to damage outbuildings and barns across open farmland before lifting.[7][9] | |||||||
| EF2 | Pilot Grove to ENE of Chouteau Springs | Cooper | MO | 38°52′N 92°56′W / 38.86°N 92.93°W | 13:34–13:40 | 6.3 mi (10.1 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
| The tornado began southwest of Pilot Grove, causing minor damage to an outbuilding before traveling northeast into town. It caused roof damage to homes, destroyed a manufactured home, and uprooted trees onto another home. The tornado intensified to low-end EF2 strength near a newly built barndominium, severely damaging it, and then causing widespread damage to homes, outbuildings, and power poles. The tornado weakened as it moved northward, with limited damage observed near I-70, where it dissipated.[10] | |||||||
| EF3 | WNW of Berryman to Floyd to NW of Old Mines | Crawford, Washington | MO | 37°52′25″N 91°08′01″W / 37.8737°N 91.1336°W | 20:13–20:39 | 21.95 mi (35.33 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
| This tornado touched down south of Berryman and moved northeastward, causing mainly minor EF0 tree damage as it approached Route 8. As the tornado approached Floyd, it intensified to EF1 intensity, snapping trees. It also inflicted minor damage to mobile homes, snapped a power pole, and damaged more trees. The tornado then rapidly intensified and reached high-end EF3 intensity as it crossed Route 185 between Ebo and Latty, leveling a home. Another home nearby suffered low-end EF3 damage with the entire top half of the home removed and multiple exterior walls knocked down and trees and power poles were snapped. The tornado then quickly weakened to EF1 intensity before gradually weakening as it continued northeastward, snapping trees and tree branches before dissipating.[7][11] | |||||||
| EF1 | NE of South Fork | Howell | MO | 36°39′46″N 91°53′56″W / 36.6628°N 91.8988°W | 20:16–20:21 | 1.13 mi (1.82 km) | 350 yd (320 m) |
| Numerous trees were uprooted and the metal roof of a small farm building was ripped off.[12] | |||||||
| EF0 | NW of Latham to N of Maroa | Logan, Macon, De Witt | IL | 39°58′45″N 89°10′49″W / 39.9791°N 89.1804°W | 20:40–20:52 | 12.79 mi (20.58 km) | 30 yd (27 m) |
| A power pole was snapped and a tree was uprooted and a barn suffered very minor roof damage. [13][14] | |||||||
| EF0 | NNE of Mercer to WSW of Bemis | Madison | TN | 35°32′45″N 88°58′27″W / 35.5457°N 88.9741°W | 21:21–21:26 | 1.89 mi (3.04 km) | 150 yd (140 m) |
| Minor roof damage occurred to several homes and multiple trees were uprooted, one of which fell onto a mobile home.[7][15] | |||||||
| EF1 | SE of Loda | Iroquois | IL | 40°29′17″N 88°03′21″W / 40.4881°N 88.0557°W | 22:00–22:02 | 2.3 mi (3.7 km) | 400 yd (370 m) |
| Power poles and outbuildings were damaged.[16][17] | |||||||
| EF2 | WNW of Pierron to SW of Shafter | Bond, Fayette | IL | 38°47′13″N 89°32′30″W / 38.7869°N 89.5416°W | 22:05–22:29 | 22.83 mi (36.74 km) | [to be determined] |
| This tornado initially touched down near Pierron, heavily damaging or destroying multiple outbuildings at EF1 intensity. Moving northeastward, the tornado intensified to high-end EF1 strength northeast of the town, snapping numerous trees before further intensifying to high-end EF2 strength south of Stubblefield. Mobile homes were destroyed, a home was left with only interior walls standing, multiple garages were destroyed, and more trees were snapped. Other outbuildings suffered moderate damage, and another home also suffered minor damage. The tornado then weakened significantly to EF0 strength and passed south of Greenville, snapping tree branches and inflicting minor damage to homes and outbuildings as it continued northeastward past Smithboro. Northwest of Mulberry Grove, the tornado restrengthened to EF1 intensity, destroying multiple outbuildings. The tornado then steadily weakened after that, causing only very minor tree damage before dissipating near Shafter. One person was injured.[7][18] | |||||||
| EF0 | W of Cissna Park | Iroquois | IL | 40°33′N 87°56′W / 40.55°N 87.94°W | 22:08–22:11 | 2.22 mi (3.57 km) | 300 yd (270 m) |
| Outbuildings at a farm were damaged with the debris deposited downstream over open farmland.[7][16][17] | |||||||
| EF1 | NNW of Budapest | Ripley | MO | 36°47′46″N 90°44′11″W / 36.7961°N 90.7364°W | 22:32–22:34 | 1.13 mi (1.82 km) | 125 yd (114 m) |
| A tornado tracked northeast, crossing Route K where considerable tree damage occurred on either side. Several homes suffered damage, with one experiencing significant roof damage. A few outbuildings were either moved or damaged. The tornado’s path beyond this area is unclear due to limited access and a poor road network.[19] | |||||||
| EF2 | SE of Pocahontas to E of Corning | Randolph, Clay | AR | 36°14′06″N 90°56′16″W / 36.2349°N 90.9378°W | 22:56–23:25 | 24.84 mi (39.98 km) | 500 yd (460 m) |
| This EF2 tornado began southeast of Pocahontas and moved through Skaggs, where it caused extensive roof damage to several homes and compromised outside walls. Several outbuildings were completely destroyed, and numerous large trees were uprooted, consistent with EF2 intensity and winds around 125 mph (201 km/h). As the tornado continued northeast, it moved into Old Reyno and crossed into Clay County, where it destroyed multiple grain bins. It caused further damage in the Heelstring area, including significant destruction to a church and residences. The tornado continued across the area, snapping utility poles and uprooting trees, with minor structure damage noted along the western side of Corning Lake. The tornado's final damage points were found along US 62, where minor damage occurred to outbuildings, trees and power poles as the tornado dissipated.[15] | |||||||
| EF2 | NE of Lodge Corner to Almyra to W of Crocketts Bluff | Arkansas | AR | 34°21′21″N 91°26′57″W / 34.3558°N 91.4491°W | 22:56–23:04 | 8.4 mi (13.5 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
| A strong tornado began in a field and moved northeast, collapsing large electrical transmission towers and causing damage to a outbuildings, trailers, and metal building. The tornado continued across AR 130, causing significant damage to a garage and other structures. It caused the partial destruction of a boat shop, with walls collapsed and metal panels carried away. As it continued, it damaged another metal building, peeling roofing panels and collapsing a porch structure. Debris from the buildings was scattered across fields, and power poles were downed. The tornado's path was obscured by flooding, but the damage continued northeast, with debris visible in fields and radar evidence indicating its track before ending in a field.[20] | |||||||
| EF1 | SSE of Fisher to SE of Waldenburg | Poinsett | AR | 35°26′43″N 90°56′26″W / 35.4452°N 90.9406°W | 22:59–23:08 | 7.47 mi (12.02 km) | 400 yd (370 m) |
| Several utility poles and trees were snapped or damaged.[7][15] | |||||||
| EF1 | SE of Altamont | Effingham | IL | 39°01′11″N 88°42′47″W / 39.0196°N 88.713°W | 23:08–23:11 | 2.55 mi (4.10 km) | 125 yd (114 m) |
| Multiple structures were damaged, but most notably, a home lost its roof.[13][21] | |||||||
| EF2 | SE of McGee to SSW of Greenbrier | Wayne, Bollinger | MO | 37°03′43″N 90°11′31″W / 37.062°N 90.192°W | 23:09–23:22 | 8.36 mi (13.45 km) | 175 yd (160 m) |
| A strong tornado severely damaged an A-frame home, ripped most of the roof off a church and another house, and caused severe tree damage.[7][22][23] | |||||||
| EF1 | SE of Almyra | Arkansas | AR | 34°23′45″N 91°24′42″W / 34.3959°N 91.4117°W | 23:21–23:23 | 0.9 mi (1.4 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
| This high-end EF1 tornado likely began just south of Almyra, where debris was found in a field. It then tracked northeast, crossing an area where several wooden power poles were snapped before dissipating in an open field.[20] | |||||||
| EF1 | SE of Teutopolis to S of Woodbury | Effingham, Jasper | IL | 39°07′05″N 88°24′38″W / 39.1181°N 88.4106°W | 23:23–23:29 | 8.37 mi (13.47 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
| A high-end EF1 tornado damaged outbuildings, did minor damage to the roof of a house, bent five power poles and damaged multiple trees.[7][13][24] | |||||||
| EF3 | W of Trumann to Lake City to SW of Leachville | Poinsett, Craighead | AR | 35°40′15″N 90°36′17″W / 35.6709°N 90.6046°W | 23:26–23:55 | 24.79 mi (39.90 km) | 1,500 yd (1,400 m) |
| See section on this tornado – Eight people were injured.[15] | |||||||
| EF2 | SW of Cash to NW of Jonesboro | Craighead | AR | 35°44′56″N 90°58′42″W / 35.7489°N 90.9784°W | 23:28–23:42 | 14.37 mi (23.13 km) | 700 yd (640 m) |
| The tornado began just west of AR 18, causing tree damage and roof damage to multiple metal outbuildings. It continued northeast, crossing AR 226, where a farm outbuilding was destroyed, trees were snapped, and farm equipment was damaged. The most significant damage occurred along a county road, where a grain silo was torn and twisted despite being bolted to the ground. As the tornado continued towards Herman, it snapped and uprooted trees, and damaged the gymnasium roof at Westside High School, along with destroying several nearby farm shops. The tornado ended after causing additional tree damage along US 63.[7][15] | |||||||
| EF0 | S of Woodbury to Jewett | Cumberland | IL | 39°11′N 88°18′W / 39.18°N 88.30°W | 23:28–23:33 | 4.05 mi (6.52 km) | 150 yd (140 m) |
| Multiple roofs and trees were damaged by a high-end EF0 tornado.[13][25] | |||||||
| EF2 | Toga to Delta to Blomeyer | Stoddard, Cape Girardeau | MO | 37°07′00″N 89°53′03″W / 37.1167°N 89.8842°W | 23:32–23:52 | 14.80 mi (23.82 km) | 600 yd (550 m) |
| 1 death – A strong tornado tracked along Route 25 for most of its life, damaging approximately 200 structures, with severe roof damage inflicted to many of them. It snapped power poles and snapped or uprooted trees as well.[7][22][26] | |||||||
| EF2 | N of Jewett, IL to Cleone, IL to New Goshen, IN | Cumberland (IL), Clark (IL), Edgar (IL), Vigo (IN) | IL, IN | 39°14′03″N 88°14′49″W / 39.2341°N 88.247°W | 23:33–00:22 | 49.04 mi (78.92 km) | 1,200 yd (1,100 m) |
| This strong, long-track tornado touched down, uprooting large trees and damaging an outbuilding. It traveled northeast, causing mainly weak damage, before reaching EF2 intensity, where over twenty power poles and large hardwood trees were snapped, and outbuildings and garages were destroyed. The tornado then entered Indiana and struck New Goshen, ripping most roofing off many structures in town. A large garage was heavily damaged, with some of its walls entirely picked up and tossed.[7][17][13][25] | |||||||
| EF1 | SE of Vastus to N of Glennonville | Butler, Dunklin | MO | 36°30′41″N 90°22′15″W / 36.5115°N 90.3708°W | 23:36–23:58 | 14.22 mi (22.88 km) | 125 yd (114 m) |
| A tornado caused damage to over a dozen homes, with shingle or siding damage observed. It also snapped over a dozen power poles and destroyed several of them. Several grain bins were destroyed, and many outbuildings sustained significant damage or were completely destroyed. The tornado eventually lifted after crossing the St. Francis River into Dunklin County.[7][15][27] | |||||||
| EF0 | NE of Cherry Valley to SW of Payneway | Cross, Poinsett | AR | 35°26′32″N 90°41′00″W / 35.4423°N 90.6832°W | 23:40–23:46 | 6.56 mi (10.56 km) | 75 yd (69 m) |
| This high-end EF0 tornado caused mainly tree and power line damage across its path.[7][15] | |||||||
| EF1 | SE of Doddridge to N of Gin City | Lafayette | AR | 33°03′39″N 93°49′59″W / 33.0609°N 93.833°W | 23:48–23:59 | 7.81 mi (12.57 km) | 250 yd (230 m) |
| A high-end EF1 tornado began by the Red River, crossing an open pasture and levee. It uprooted several trees and caused damage as it moved northeast, crossing an intersection and continuing over farmland. The tornado snapped seven wooden power poles along AR 160 west of Gin City, before causing additional damage in the farmland area, snapping three more power poles and a few trees. A small section of a metal roof was also ripped off a home. The tornado finally lifted near a grove of trees behind a church.[28] | |||||||
| EF1 | SSE of Rutland to Bourbon to NNE of Etna Green | Marshall, Kosciusko | IN | 41°13′45″N 86°20′52″W / 41.2292°N 86.3477°W | 23:52–00:10 | 17.91 mi (28.82 km) | 175 yd (160 m) |
| A fast-moving tornado snapped and uprooted trees, caused extensive roof damage to several homes, and inflicted sporadic damage to power poles.[29] | |||||||
| EF1 | Southern Cape Girardeau, MO to NE of East Cape Girardeau, IL | Cape Girardeau (MO), Alexander (IL) | MO, IL | 37°16′09″N 89°35′46″W / 37.2692°N 89.5962°W | 23:56–00:06 | 8.33 mi (13.41 km) | 150 yd (140 m) |
| Minor structural damage occurred to apartments, businesses, and homes in Cape Girardeau. Power poles and trees were damaged as well.[22][26] | |||||||
| EF1 | NE of Marshall to SE of Dennison to ESE of Elbridge | Clark, Edgar | IL | 39°25′08″N 87°38′23″W / 39.4188°N 87.6397°W | 00:02–00:09 | 8.11 mi (13.05 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
| A tornado touched down, blowing two semi-trucks over on I-70. It then caused significant damage at a hog farm, destroying eight buildings and several trees, with debris scattered along the tornado's path. Beyond the farm, the tornado continued to damage trees, power lines, and outbuildings before dissipating near the Indiana border.[13][25][17] | |||||||
| EF1 | SSE of Reynoldsville to NW of Jonesboro | Union | IL | 37°21′03″N 89°24′11″W / 37.3507°N 89.403°W | 00:08–00:20 | 10.93 mi (17.59 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
| This very narrow tornado initially tracked northward along IL 3/IL 146 before turning sharply northeastward and dissipating as it crossed IL 127/IL 146 near Jonesboro. Damage along the path was limited to snapped or uprooted trees.[22][30] | |||||||
| EF1 | NW of Taylor | Lafayette | AR | 33°10′34″N 93°31′38″W / 33.1762°N 93.5273°W | 00:17–00:18 | 0.28 mi (0.45 km) | 75 yd (69 m) |
| A tornado touched down in a wooded area just west of AR 53. It uprooted multiple trees before crossing the highway, where it continued to snap and uproot several more trees and tree tops and eventually lifted.[28] | |||||||
| EF1 | W of West Atherton to NE of Minshall | Parke | IN | 39°37′N 87°23′W / 39.61°N 87.38°W | 00:24–00:31 | 10.78 mi (17.35 km) | 120 yd (110 m) |
| One home and two other structures sustained high-end EF1 tornado damage. Trees were damaged as well.[7][17][31] | |||||||
| EF0 | N of Anna | Union | IL | 37°29′01″N 89°14′10″W / 37.4837°N 89.2362°W | 00:25–00:27 | 1.25 mi (2.01 km) | 25 yd (23 m) |
| A few trees were snapped or uprooted.[22][30] | |||||||
| EF1 | McMullin | Scott | MO | 36°57′01″N 89°37′57″W / 36.9503°N 89.6324°W | 00:30–00:31 | 1.14 mi (1.83 km) | 250 yd (230 m) |
| This high-end EF1 tornado completely destroyed an equipment building, severely damaged the roofs of multiple homes and snapped or uprooted several trees.[32] | |||||||
| EF0 | NW of Heth | St. Francis, Crittenden | AR | 35°07′52″N 90°30′57″W / 35.1311°N 90.5158°W | 00:35–00:38 | 3.06 mi (4.92 km) | 75 yd (69 m) |
| A center irrigation pivot was overturned and a few power poles and trees were knocked down.[7][15] | |||||||
| EF2 | N of Buncombe | Johnson | IL | 37°28′59″N 88°59′36″W / 37.483°N 88.9934°W | 00:36–00:43 | 5.78 mi (9.30 km) | 250 yd (230 m) |
| Hundreds of pine trees sustained severe damage. The roof was ripped off a house, a few outbuildings were destroyed, and a few cabins were damaged.[22][33] | |||||||
| EF1 | Orland, IN to W of Pearl Beach, MI | Steuben (IN), Branch (MI) | IN, MI | 41°43′25″N 85°10′15″W / 41.7237°N 85.1709°W | 00:46–00:54 | 10.94 mi (17.61 km) | 600 yd (550 m) |
| A tornado touched down in Orland, destroying a small barn and uprooting trees before damaging the roof of an apartment building. It then caused significant tree damage across various properties and moved northeast, crossing into Michigan. The tornado reached its maximum intensity near a farm, tearing roofs off silos, destroying a barn section, and damaging a home with debris. The tornado dissipated after causing additional light structural and tree damage.[29] | |||||||
| EF1 | WNW of East Gilead to Bethel | Branch | MI | 41°47′06″N 85°06′54″W / 41.7849°N 85.115°W | 00:49–00:52 | 3.91 mi (6.29 km) | 125 yd (114 m) |
| This tornado caused tree damage near its touch down location before continuing northeast, affecting multiple Amish properties. The most significant damage occurred on a road west of Bethel, where numerous large trees were snapped or uprooted, and a home sustained major damage, though repairs had already been made. The wind speeds that damaged the home could not be estimated due to the completed repairs.[29] | |||||||
| EF1 | E of Creal Springs | Williamson | IL | 37°36′45″N 88°48′36″W / 37.6124°N 88.8099°W | 00:51–00:55 | 3.36 mi (5.41 km) | 75 yd (69 m) |
| Trees were snapped or uprooted, a home sustained roof damage, and a carport was destroyed.[22][33] | |||||||
| EF2 | NNW of Columbus to SSW of Blandville | Carlisle | KY | 36°50′00″N 89°07′44″W / 36.8334°N 89.1289°W | 01:00–01:09 | 9.73 mi (15.66 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
| A strong tornado snapped power poles and lifted a garage off its foundation, moving it a short distance. Dozens of trees were snapped or uprooted along the tornado's path as well. This tornado may have started west of the Mississippi River.[22][34] | |||||||
| EF2 | NE of Danville to Brownsburg to Northwestern Indianapolis | Hendricks, Marion | IN | 39°48′18″N 86°29′45″W / 39.805°N 86.4958°W | 01:05–01:21 | 13.03 mi (20.97 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
| A strong tornado began in rural areas between Danville and Brownsburg before reaching the southern part of downtown Brownsburg, where it caused sporadic tree and roof damage. The most significant damage occurred where several warehouses were damaged. One injury occurred when a warehouse wall caved in. Over twenty homes in a nearby neighborhood sustained roof and minor structural damage. Additional tree damage was observed in Eagle Creek Park before the tornado lifted near I-65.[17][35] | |||||||
| EF1 | NW of Equality to WNW of Ridgway | Saline, Gallatin | IL | 37°46′30″N 88°23′24″W / 37.7749°N 88.3899°W | 01:14–01:20 | 5.14 mi (8.27 km) | 300 yd (270 m) |
| Trees were snapped or uprooted, a wooden power pole was snapped, and a few outbuildings lost their roof coverings.[22][36] | |||||||
| EF1 | NE of Brownsburg | Hendricks | IN | 39°51′49″N 86°21′13″W / 39.8637°N 86.3536°W | 01:15–01:17 | 1.53 mi (2.46 km) | 300 yd (270 m) |
| A tornado began in a field, where ground scouring was noted in high-resolution satellite imagery. It moved east, causing minor damage by bending a small utility pole before reaching a subdivision where several homes had roof and siding damage. The tornado then tracked northeast, crossing another road and destroying two older barns and a silo. Debris was scattered about a quarter mile northeast, with ground scouring and a debris field observed.[17][37] | |||||||
| EF2 | W of Gage to Northern Paducah | Ballard, McCracken | KY | 36°59′46″N 88°55′40″W / 36.996°N 88.9278°W | 01:18–01:34 | 19.07 mi (30.69 km) | 1,000 yd (910 m) |
| A low-end EF2 tornado snapped power poles and damaged several barns and outbuildings near Gage, one barn which was completely destroyed. The tornado then caused significant damage to a church, injuring four people who were sheltering under an awning. Upon entering McCracken County, the tornado severely damaged another church adjacent to Barkley Regional Airport. Trees, power poles, and some homes and businesses received damage as the tornado tracked through the northern parts of Paducah before lifting right at the shore of the Ohio River.[22][38] | |||||||
| EF1 | S of Cottonwood to W of New Haven | Gallatin, White | IL | 37°51′22″N 88°12′33″W / 37.8562°N 88.2093°W | 01:23–01:27 | 4.96 mi (7.98 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
| This tornado touched down and traveled northeast, causing minor roof and siding damage to several homes. It severely damaged a large barn and uprooted or snapped some isolated trees along its path. The tornado caused partial damage to solar panels just east of a road crossing. After crossing the Little Wabash River into White County, the tornado continued to cause tree damage and overturned an irrigation pivot before dissipating.[22][39] | |||||||
| EF1 | Carmel | Hamilton | IN | 39°57′21″N 86°09′15″W / 39.9558°N 86.1542°W | 01:28–01:35 | 6.6 mi (10.6 km) | 150 yd (140 m) |
| This tornado touched down southwest of downtown Carmel, causing damage to an office building with uprooted trees converging toward the structure. It continued northeast, damaging the roofs and siding of several homes and apartment buildings, along with numerous uprooted or snapped trees. The damage path was intermittent, with breaks of up to a third of a mile with little to no damage. Most of the damage ended near the White River.[17][40] | |||||||
| EF1 | ESE of Trimble to NE of Kenton | Gibson, Obion | TN | 36°10′12″N 89°06′47″W / 36.1699°N 89.113°W | 01:35–01:46 | 9.51 mi (15.30 km) | 350 yd (320 m) |
| A tornado began near an intersection, where it caused multiple trees to be snapped at the tops and damaged the roof of a single-family home. It continued northeastward, snapping more trees and causing additional roof damage to homes. One home had its siding peeled off, and a nearby carport was damaged. The tornado intensified as it moved across open fields, causing significant tree damage and roof damage to barns and homes. It then crossed US 45W, where several homes had minor roof damage, and additional trees were snapped or uprooted. The tornado continued through fields, damaging more homes and uprooting trees before lifting after crossing a road.[7][15] | |||||||
| EF2 | SE of Fishersburg | Madison | IN | 40°02′24″N 85°50′40″W / 40.04°N 85.8445°W | 01:43–01:46 | 2.15 mi (3.46 km) | 250 yd (230 m) |
| A brief but strong tornado caused significant damage at a large farm, where both a home and several outbuildings were heavily damaged. Debris was scattered from west to northeast, with some of it being deposited over a mile away.[17][40] | |||||||
| EF2 | E of Unionville, IL to NW of Tiline, KY | Massac (IL), Pope (IL), Livingston (KY) | IL, KY | 37°07′21″N 88°30′14″W / 37.1224°N 88.5038°W | 01:43–01:52 | 12.07 mi (19.42 km) | 150 yd (140 m) |
| A home sustained roof damage, utility poles were snapped, and trees were damaged.[22][41] | |||||||
| EF1 | N of Fishersburg to SW of Prosperity | Madison | IN | 40°04′51″N 85°51′38″W / 40.0808°N 85.8606°W | 01:46–01:55 | 11.57 mi (18.62 km) | 150 yd (140 m) |
| A tornado likely started in a field near a farm and caused significant damage to several barns and a grain silo, including the destruction of an L-shaped pole barn. It also damaged a garage, lifting the roof and collapsing the walls. The tornado continued northeast over mainly rural land before dissipating.[17][40] | |||||||
| EF2 | N of St. Philip to N of Darmstadt | Posey, Vanderburgh | IN | 38°00′08″N 87°42′48″W / 38.0023°N 87.7132°W | 01:51–02:02 | 10.97 mi (17.65 km) | 150 yd (140 m) |
| This strong tornado began north of St. Philip and tracked northeast into Vanderburgh County, causing significant damage as it crossed SR 66. Several homes suffered major roof damage, and extensive tree damage occurred, particularly with snapped pines. As the tornado crossed SR 65 and moved near Darmstadt, numerous homes sustained roof or siding damage, with many trees snapped or uprooted along the path. The tornado ended just north of Darmstadt.[7][42] | |||||||
| EF1 | Blairsville | Posey | IN | 38°04′N 87°46′W / 38.07°N 87.77°W | 01:52–01:53 | 1.13 mi (1.82 km) | 75 yd (69 m) |
| This brief tornado moved through Blairsville. Several homes had shingle, soffit, or siding damage, and trees were snapped or uprooted as well.[7][22] | |||||||
| EF0 | NE of Anderson to Western Yorktown | Madison, Delaware | IN | 40°09′27″N 85°36′45″W / 40.1575°N 85.6126°W | 01:52–02:02 | 4.92 mi (7.92 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
| A high-end, intermittent EF0 tornado snapped the tops off of trees and did roofing and siding damage to multiple structures.[17][43] | |||||||
| EF1 | NW of Evansville to Northwestern Highland to SE of Buckskin | Vanderburgh, Warrick, Gibson | IN | 38°01′45″N 87°35′57″W / 38.0292°N 87.5993°W | 01:55–02:14 | 17.33 mi (27.89 km) | 230 yd (210 m) |
| This tornado touched down northeast of Montoux Park, moving northeast and causing minor roof damage to homes and uprooting trees in Highland. It then crossed US 41 and continued northeast, snapping trees and causing minor roof damage in areas between Hillsdale and Earle. The tornado moved through the north side of a neighborhood, damaging roofs, fences, and outbuildings. It crossed I-69 and continued into Warrick County, affecting the north side of Elberfeld before crossing I-64. Further northeast, the tornado impacted a neighborhood, damaging roofs and destroying several sheds. It then crossed SR 68, causing more roof damage and affecting barns and trees in Gibson County before lifting.[7][44] | |||||||
| EF2 | SE of Moonville to NW of Shideler | Madison, Delaware | IN | 40°11′18″N 85°35′40″W / 40.1882°N 85.5945°W | 01:57–02:17 | 15.15 mi (24.38 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
| A strong tornado began in a wooded area south of a farm and hit the first homestead, ripping the fireplace off the home, blowing part of the roof off, and damaging a wall. Several old outbuildings were completely destroyed, with weak mortar holding them in place, and an old barn was shifted off its foundation, losing its roof. As the tornado moved northeast, it caused significant damage to multiple structures, continuing its path of destruction up to just southwest of Eaton before lifting.[17][40] | |||||||
| EF2 | WNW of Latham to SW of Austin Springs | Weakley | TN | 36°26′25″N 88°47′49″W / 36.4404°N 88.797°W | 02:00–02:12 | 6.38 mi (10.27 km) | 350 yd (320 m) |
| A low-end EF2 tornado touched down just east of the Obion county line, causing significant tree damage and destroying a metal barn. A nearby home suffered minor roof damage. As the tornado continued east, it caused more tree damage and significant roof damage to a home, with several trees snapped or uprooted. The tornado intensified as it reached another area, where it severely damaged a home’s roof, displaced a manufactured home, and collapsed a garage. Most of the trees in this area were uprooted or snapped. The tornado continued northeast, causing additional tree damage and minor roof damage to a home and outbuilding. It eventually lifted before reaching Austin Springs.[7][15] | |||||||
| EF1 | NW of Darmstadt to S of Warrenton | Vanderburgh | IN | 38°06′57″N 87°35′51″W / 38.1158°N 87.5975°W | 02:01–02:05 | 4.08 mi (6.57 km) | 75 yd (69 m) |
| This tornado damaged several trees and outbuildings, and some homes experienced roof or siding damage. A grain bin was destroyed, with debris thrown approximately 499 yd (456 m) into a field. The tornado then dissipated near a golf club.[7][45] | |||||||
| EF1 | NW of Muncie to SW of Shideler | Delaware | IN | 40°14′56″N 85°27′53″W / 40.2488°N 85.4646°W | 02:04–02:08 | 5.81 mi (9.35 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
| A couple outbuildings and a home suffered damage.[17][43] | |||||||
| EF1 | Northern Boonville to SSE of Dickeyville | Warrick | IN | 38°03′35″N 87°16′56″W / 38.0596°N 87.2821°W | 02:10–02:17 | 6.75 mi (10.86 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
| A tornado touched down in Boonville, causing minor roof damage and uprooted trees. It continued northeast through the Rolling Acres area, snapping and uprooting trees. As it crossed additional roads, it caused further damage to trees and some roof shingles. The tornado continued causing tree damage before lifting near a rural intersection.[7][46] | |||||||
| EF1 | SW of Boydsville, TN to SE of Murray, KY | Weakley (TN), Henry (TN), Graves (KY), Calloway (KY) | TN, KY | 36°28′32″N 88°34′08″W / 36.4756°N 88.5689°W | 02:17–02:32 | 17.49 mi (28.15 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
| Numerous outbuildings were destroyed, extensive tree damage occurred, and roofs were blown from homes in rural Calloway County. As it entered into southern Murray, the tornado caused single damage to some homes, and blew the roof of an auto-repair shop before it lifted.[7][47][15] | |||||||
| EF1 | Northern Madisonville to E of Slaughters | Hopkins | KY | 37°20′07″N 87°32′19″W / 37.3354°N 87.5385°W | 02:34–02:43 | 12.55 mi (20.20 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
| This tornado began in western Madisonville, removing part of the roof from a Humane Society building, though no animals were harmed. It continued northeast, causing sporadic tree damage and damaging a home's roof and gutters as it crossed I-69. The tornado may have continued into McLean County near Jewel City, but the area was inaccessible due to flooding.[48] | |||||||
| EF1 | SW of Willshire, OH (1st tornado) | Adams | IN | 40°42′04″N 84°51′01″W / 40.701°N 84.8502°W | 02:47–02:49 | 2.33 mi (3.75 km) | 75 yd (69 m) |
| This tornado caused roof damage to several Amish properties, which had already been repaired. It also destroyed and partially destroyed well-built pole barns along its path. This tornado occurred simultaneously with, and on a parallel track to, the subsequent Adams County EF1 tornado.[17][29] | |||||||
| EF1 | SW of Willshire, OH (2nd tornado) | Adams | IN | 40°41′17″N 84°50′04″W / 40.6881°N 84.8345°W | 02:48–02:50 | 1.55 mi (2.49 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
| This tornado first damaged pole barns and poultry farms, before removing the roof of a mobile home. It continued its path, tossing a grain silo up to half a mile away and collapsing part of a farm structure. This tornado occurred simultaneously with, and on a parallel track to, the previous Adams County EF1 tornado.[17][29] | |||||||
| EF0 | SE of Heltonville | Lawrence | IN | 38°54′14″N 86°20′46″W / 38.9039°N 86.3462°W | 02:57–02:58 | 0.06 mi (0.097 km) | 20 yd (18 m) |
| A brief tornado damaged a pole barn, collapsing all but one of the walls and embedding two 2x4 planks into the ground nearby.[17][49] | |||||||
| EF2 | WNW of Semiway to Calhoun to N of Buel | McLean | KY | 37°29′28″N 87°18′15″W / 37.491°N 87.3043°W | 02:58–03:06 | 9.49 mi (15.27 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
| This low-end EF2 tornado began in the Pack Church community and moved northeast. It caused damage to a historic brick building and a church steeple in downtown Calhoun, as well as the roof of a nearby home. The tornado continued through the east side of Calhoun, damaging trees in a city park and outbuildings at the 4H fairgrounds. It snapped two power transmission poles and severely damaged an outbuilding along KY 136 before crossing KY 250, where it damaged another outbuilding and snapped large hardwood trees before lifting.[50] | |||||||
| EF1 | SE of Glenmore | Van Wert | OH | 40°46′30″N 84°41′51″W / 40.7749°N 84.6975°W | 02:58–03:00 | 0.81 mi (1.30 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
| A brief tornado destroyed an outbuilding and tossed debris 400 yards (370 m) away. Several trees were snapped as well.[17][29] | |||||||
| EF1 | S of Van Wert to NW of Ottoville | Van Wert, Putnam | OH | 40°48′45″N 84°34′59″W / 40.8124°N 84.583°W | 03:02–03:13 | 15.61 mi (25.12 km) | 300 yd (270 m) |
| This tornado touched down south of Van Wert, destroying a barn before moving just outside the southeast corner of town and causing tree and shingle damage and destroying another two-story barn. It continued northeast, causing minor damage north of US 30, damaging a deer farm, and destroying a pole barn before dissipating.[17][29] | |||||||
| EF2 | NE of Mandale to Dupont | Paulding, Putnam | OH | 41°01′34″N 84°20′52″W / 41.0261°N 84.3477°W | 03:18–03:22 | 4.51 mi (7.26 km) | 375 yd (343 m) |
| A strong tornado touched down, severely damaging a pole barn before quickly moving into Putnam County. It flipped a well-anchored mobile home at EF2 intensity, injuring two of the three occupants. The tornado destroyed another large pole barn and caused widespread damage in Dupont, including damage to several corn silos. The tornado dissipated shortly after exiting the town.[29] | |||||||
| EF2 | SW of Shorts Corner to ESE of New Salem | Washington, Scott | IN | 38°29′21″N 86°06′47″W / 38.4893°N 86.113°W | 03:20–03:33 | 15.76 mi (25.36 km) | 600 yd (550 m) |
| A low-end EF2 tornado caused significant damage, especially near a community church, where the roof was severely damaged and gravestones in the cemetery were knocked over. A mobile home was destroyed and rolled 75 yards (69 m), with a chest freezer thrown 100 yards (91 m) into the cemetery. The worst damage occurred near a water tower, with the tornado causing widespread tree fall and structural damage. Additional damage occurred to mobile homes, barns, and trees along the tornado's path. The tornado continued northeast, snapping and uprooting trees and causing minor damage to homes. The tornado's path ended in a heavily forested area just across the Washington/Scott County border, where sporadic straight-line wind damage was observed.[51] | |||||||
| EF1 | Northern New Albany | Floyd | IN | 38°18′51″N 85°50′24″W / 38.3142°N 85.8399°W | 03:53–03:56 | 2.24 mi (3.60 km) | 500 yd (460 m) |
| This tornado began just west of an intersection, where it snapped several power poles and caused tree damage near a cemetery and nearby neighborhood. It continued east-northeast, impacting a flat area south of Sam Peden Community Park. The tornado caused notable damage in a swath, including tree damage at a preschool and the displacement of a dumpster. Several trees were downed along another road before the tornado lifted.[52] | |||||||
| EF# | Location | County / parish | State | Start coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max. width |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EF0 | E of Murray to W of New Concord | Calloway | KY | 36°36′50″N 88°16′53″W / 36.6138°N 88.2815°W | 04:23–04:31 | 8.92 mi (14.36 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
| A high-end EF0 tornado began east of Murray along KY 94 where it damaged the roof of a commercial building and a nearby church. The tornado continued damaging outbuildings and uprooting trees before lifting on the western shore of Kentucky Lake.[47] | |||||||
| EF0 | W of Clyde | Sandusky | OH | 41°19′15″N 83°02′30″W / 41.3207°N 83.0418°W | 04:25–04:27 | 0.72 mi (1.16 km) | 15 yd (14 m) |
| This weak tornado with peak winds estimated at 85 mph (137 km/h) caused damage to two barns, leaving debris near US 20. The tornado also left visible marks of rotation in a field.[53] | |||||||
| EF3 | Jeffersontown to Boston | Jefferson | KY | 38°11′11″N 85°34′55″W / 38.1864°N 85.582°W | 04:29–04:39 | 9.68 mi (15.58 km) | 350 yd (320 m) |
| An intense tornado touched down near an industrial area, initially causing tree damage before intensifying as it moved northeast. It caused significant structural damage, including peeling roofs from metal warehouses, destroying buildings, and scattering debris over large distances. The tornado then reached its peak intensity in eastern Jeffersontown, tearing apart buildings, uprooting trees, and throwing debris up to a mile away. It caused major damage to several commercial properties, including warehouse buildings where their braces failed, and other structures lost roofs and walls. Vehicles were moved, windows blown out, and HVAC units were displaced. The tornado continued northeast, causing roof and siding damage to homes and uprooting trees in residential areas. It weakened and ended with minor damage in a forested area.[54] | |||||||
| EF0 | ENE of Five Points to SSE of Centerville | Warren, Montgomery | OH | 39°34′21″N 84°09′40″W / 39.5725°N 84.1612°W | 04:58–05:01 | 3 mi (4.8 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
| Numerous trees were damaged and several homes had minor siding damage.[55] | |||||||
| EF0 | Northeastern Maineville to Roachester to NE of Hicks | Warren | OH | 39°19′11″N 84°11′10″W / 39.3197°N 84.186°W | 05:02–05:10 | 8.7 mi (14.0 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
| A tornado began in northeastern Maineville where it caused tree and garage damage. It moved northeast, causing more significant tree damage until impacting a subdivision where it inflicted minor damage to homes and damaged more trees. The tornado paralleled US 22 where it removed a metal roof from an outbuilding and uprooted several trees, one of which fell onto a home, before lifting.[56] | |||||||
| EF2 | S of Hopewell, MS to SE of Middleton, TN | Benton (MS), Tippah (MS), Hardeman (TN) | MS, TN | 34°57′09″N 89°03′11″W / 34.9524°N 89.0531°W | 05:07–05:23 | 12.51 mi (20.13 km) | 450 yd (410 m) |
| This strong tornado began on US 72, causing tree damage and damaging a manufactured home. As it moved northeast into Tippah county, more trees were uprooted and additional damage to a home was noted. The tornado continued northeast, causing more tree damage and destroying a manufactured home before crossing into Hardeman county in Tennessee. In Hardeman county, the tornado moved through a forested area and then caused significant tree damage as it passed through several rural areas. The tornado crossed SR 125, downing more trees, damaging a home’s roof, and tearing off roof panels from a small barn. The tornado eventually dissipated just south of SR 57. Three injuries occurred.[7][15] | |||||||
| EF1 | SE of Bardstown to W of Fredericktown | Nelson | KY | 37°45′08″N 85°25′21″W / 37.7521°N 85.4226°W | 05:16–05:19 | 1.97 mi (3.17 km) | 175 yd (160 m) |
| This tornado began on a hilltop, uprooting several trees and causing significant damage to barns and outbuildings as it tracked east-northeast. The worst damage occurred to a small outbuilding where only one wall remained standing and debris was scattered up to 200 yards (180 m). A nearby house sustained minor fascia damage with slight buckling of brick columns. As the tornado continued, it crossed another road, causing scattered tree damage and minor roof damage to several homes. Multiple barns and small outbuildings were damaged, including a well-built barn whose roof collapsed. The tornado continued northeast, causing isolated tree damage and further damaging barns and lean-tos. It ultimately lifted near a road with no additional significant damage found downstream.[7][57] | |||||||
| EF0 | N of Fayetteville to Southern Lynchburg | Brown, Highland, Clinton | OH | 39°11′56″N 83°55′48″W / 39.199°N 83.93°W | 05:17–05:24 | 7.9 mi (12.7 km) | 250 yd (230 m) |
| A tornado began near by US 68, destroying a barn and throwing debris into a field. It continued northeast, downing numerous trees on the campus of Chatfield College. As the tornado progressed northeast, it caused tree damage, removed siding and shingles from a home, and downed large limbs. The tornado dissipated near southern Lynchburg where more tree damage was observed along SR 134.[58] | |||||||
| EF0 | N of St. Martin to WNW of Lynchburg | Clinton | OH | 39°14′58″N 83°52′50″W / 39.2494°N 83.8805°W | 05:19–05:22 | 2.7 mi (4.3 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
| A weak tornado caused roof damage to an outbuilding. It continued along a short path where a barn was overturned and large tree limbs were knocked over. The tornado ended with the destruction of another barn and additional tree damage.[59] | |||||||
| EF3 | SE of Strayhorn to ESE of Coldwater | Tate | MS | 34°34′58″N 90°06′16″W / 34.5828°N 90.1044°W | 05:24–05:39 | 12.22 mi (19.67 km) | 650 yd (590 m) |
| An intense, high-end EF3 tornado touched down, uprooting several trees as it moved northeast. It intensified as it crossed a road, snapping several tree trunks, and caused severe damage near a local area with one home having multiple collapsed walls and another completely destroyed. The tornado continued its path, crossing MS 4, where additional tree damage occurred and light poles were damaged. It also caused roof damage to a home and further tree damage. After crossing another US 51 and I-55, the tornado caused more damage to homes and trees in a nearby neighborhood before lifting just prior to reaching a creek.[7][15] | |||||||
| EF1 | W of Hells Halfacre to Berry to Antioch | Harrison | KY | 38°29′13″N 84°27′57″W / 38.4869°N 84.4658°W | 05:26–05:35 | 10.81 mi (17.40 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
| This tornado started by damaging the doors, roof and siding of a barn. The tornado then inflicted significant damage to a travel trailer and a home where part of the roof was torn off and boards were impaled into the house. Continuing northeast, it uprooted several trees near Berry and caused further damage across additional areas. The tornado flipped a camper and caused a barn to lean, then leveled another barn just south of US 27 before lifting.[60] | |||||||
| EF0 | SSW of Sabina to SW of Washington Court House | Clinton, Fayette | OH | 39°26′33″N 83°39′58″W / 39.4424°N 83.6662°W | 05:29–05:35 | 9.3 mi (15.0 km) | 350 yd (320 m) |
| A high-end EF0 tornado began by knocking down power poles and removing the roofs of two barns along SR 72. As it continued eastward, it destroyed another barn, snapped trees, and caused roof and gutter damage to a home. The tornado scattered debris in multiple directions and downed additional power poles. As it crossed into Fayette county, it continued to cause roof damage to barns and additional tree damage along several roads. The tornado lifted after causing damage to a silo, marking the end of the observed damage path.[61] | |||||||
| EF3 | NE of Pocahontas to Selmer to NW of Oak Grove | McNairy, Hardin | TN | 35°07′42″N 88°42′52″W / 35.1282°N 88.7145°W | 05:34–06:07 | 29.33 mi (47.20 km) | 650 yd (590 m) |
| 5 deaths – See section on this tornado – 14 people were injured.[7][15] | |||||||
| EF0 | Minerva | Mason | KY | 38°42′19″N 83°55′06″W / 38.7053°N 83.9183°W | 05:52–05:55 | 1.8 mi (2.9 km) | 150 yd (140 m) |
| This tornado touched down in the center of Minerva, causing minor damage. It followed a nearly identical path as an EF1 tornado from the year prior, moving northeast and causing damage to outbuildings, homes, and farm equipment. While weaker than the tornado from last year, it still produced significant damage. The tornado is believed to have dissipated near Lee Creek.[62] | |||||||
| EF2 | NW of Griderville to SW of Bear Wallow | Barren | KY | 37°07′19″N 85°53′38″W / 37.1219°N 85.8939°W | 06:04–06:09 | 4.89 mi (7.87 km) | 400 yd (370 m) |
| This strong tornado first touched down near a barn, completely destroying it. The tornado continued over farmland, causing roof damage to several barns and a mobile home. Upon crossing US 31E, the tornado intensified, ripping the roof off a single-story home and also damaging barns and outbuildings. The tornado continued northeast, causing significant roof damage to homes while also snapping and uprooting trees. After crossing an area of open farmland, the damage lessened, with minor tree damage being noted as the tornado dissipated. One person was injured.[7][63] | |||||||
| EF3 | NE of Red Banks, MS to Grand Junction, TN to SW of Hornsby, TN | Marshall (MS), Benton (MS), Fayette (TN), Hardeman (TN) | MS, TN | 34°53′25″N 89°30′23″W / 34.8902°N 89.5064°W | 06:13–07:02 | 39.93 mi (64.26 km) | 1,200 yd (1,100 m) |
| 2 deaths – See section on this tornado – Two people were injured.[7][15] | |||||||
| EF1 | ENE of Roachville to S of Elk Horn | Taylor | KY | 37°15′04″N 85°23′23″W / 37.2512°N 85.3896°W | 06:29–06:35 | 6.97 mi (11.22 km) | 125 yd (114 m) |
| A high-end EF1 tornado touched down, damaging cedar trees. It continued northeast, damaging trees and roofs, including the roof of a garage barn. The tornado crossed KY 55 and caused additional tree damage, uprooting trees and snapping large branches. Significant roof damage was reported at a local restaurant, with wind speeds reaching 110 miles per hour (180 km/h). The tornado continued, causing tree damage in Green River Lake State Park and rural areas before lifting near Green River Lake.[64] | |||||||
| EF1 | SW of Rowland to ENE of Preachersville | Lincoln, Garrard | KY | 37°30′21″N 84°39′15″W / 37.5058°N 84.6543°W | 07:07–07:15 | 8.99 mi (14.47 km) | 90 yd (82 m) |
| This tornado touched down near the intersection of US 27 and KY 698, where it collapsed a barn and toppled some softwood trees. It continued south, toppling and uprooting more trees near a creek. As it moved toward the Garrard county line, it caused significant damage, including the destruction of outbuildings, the removal of fence posts, and the tearing of fences across KY 39. A single-family home had minor roof damage and several barns were damaged with panels and metal sheeting ripped apart. The tornado weakened as it approached a rural area where large tree limbs were downed and barns had minor damage before lifting.[7][65] | |||||||
| EF1 | N of Walterhill to NW of Watertown | Wilson | TN | 36°03′26″N 86°21′53″W / 36.0573°N 86.3648°W | 14:36–14:52 | 11.6 mi (18.7 km) | 300 yd (270 m) |
| This tornado began northeast of the Nashville Superspeedway, causing timber and minor structural damage. It continued northeast where it inflicted minor damage on homes, including snapped trees and fences, and caused additional timber damage. As the tornado moved northeast, it caused significant tree damage with several hardwoods snapped or uprooted. Some homes had minor roof damage. The tornado also impacted farm structures before dissipating.[66] | |||||||
| EF1 | Northwestern Glen, MS to Walnut Grove, TN | Alcorn (MS, Tishomingo (MS), Lauderdale (AL), Hardin (TN) | MS, AL, TN | 34°51′37″N 88°26′24″W / 34.8603°N 88.44°W | 21:38–22:08 | 28.45 mi (45.79 km) | 425 yd (389 m) |
| A tornado touched down northeast of a county maintenance facility where it snapped and uprooted several trees, causing moderate damage to one home. It continued through a wooded area before crossing US 72, causing minor roof damage to a school and uprooting several trees. The tornado weakened after this, causing sporadic tree damage through a wooded area. As it moved northeast, it crossed MS 25 and entered JP Coleman State Park where it caused more tree damage. It then crossed the Tennessee River into extreme northwestern Alabama where it intensified and caused significant tree damage. The tornado continued northward, uprooting and snapping large trees before crossing into Tennessee with additional tree damage noted in Walnut Grove before the tornado lifted .[7][67][15] | |||||||
| EF0 | WNW of Lawrenceburg | Lawrence | TN | 35°18′31″N 87°30′13″W / 35.3085°N 87.5036°W | 22:57–22:58 | 0.07 mi (0.11 km) | 25 yd (23 m) |
| A tornado was observed to be on the ground for thirty seconds. No damage occurred.[66] | |||||||
| EF# | Location | County / parish | State | Start coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max. width |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EF0 | NW of Van to E of Grand Saline | Van Zandt | TX | 32°35′00″N 95°42′15″W / 32.5833°N 95.7041°W | 20:17–20:30 | 9 mi (14 km) | 75 yd (69 m) |
| One home lost part of a wall while another sustained roof damage. A manufactured home also sustained roof and porch damage. Several trees were snapped or uprooted.[68] | |||||||
| EF2 | NE of Bogata to S of Clarksville | Red River | TX | 33°29′35″N 95°10′15″W / 33.4931°N 95.1707°W | 20:27–20:43 | 9.66 mi (15.55 km) | 580 yd (530 m) |
| A strong tornado began in Rosalie, where it initially snapped both hardwood and softwood trees. It quickly intensified, causing major damage to a home, including the destruction of its attached garage and significant roof loss. A nearby tree was partially debarked, and the house was reported to have been shifted off its foundation. The tornado then moved into an oil field, causing damage to a pump jack, which was partially lifted from its concrete foundation, and continued to snap large hardwood trees along its path. The tornado moved northeast, causing significant damage to outbuildings and large hardwood trees. As it continued, it struck the Clarksville/Red River County Airport, collapsing a large hangar and damaging several planes before lifting after crossing the runway.[69] | |||||||
| EF1 | SE of Millerton to SSE of Bethel | McCurtain | OK | 33°57′30″N 94°59′12″W / 33.9582°N 94.9867°W | 20:37–21:23 | 24.57 mi (39.54 km) | 303 yd (277 m) |
| This tornado began just west of a local arena and south of US 70, where it uprooted and snapped numerous trees. As it continued its northeast path, the tornado caused tree damage near a home, where a small outbuilding collapsed. After crossing US 70, it caused extensive tree damage along a nearby road and blew the roof off another outbuilding, carrying it across the street. The tornado’s track continued northeast, where significant tree damage was observed, including many uprooted trees and snapped trunks. In the North Pole area, the tornado reached peak intensity, damaging a home with a large fallen tree. As it moved further, it damaged more trees along various roads and up a ridgeline before the track became difficult to trace due to inaccessibility. Despite limited road access, additional tree damage was found further northeast before dissipating shortly after.[7][69] | |||||||
| EF1 | Eastern Clarksville to E of Hopewell | Red River | TX | 33°36′49″N 95°02′06″W / 33.6136°N 95.0351°W | 20:46–21:06 | 10.05 mi (16.17 km) | 411 yd (376 m) |
| A high-end EF1 tornado, touched down in extreme eastern Clarksville, snapping a hardwood tree trunk. It continued northeast, crossing US 82 and a pasture, where large tree branches were snapped. The tornado intensified as it reached Madras, causing significant tree damage. After passing over a heavily wooded area, the tornado continued north, snapping and uprooting more trees along its path before dissipating.[7] | |||||||
| EF1 | WNW of Hawkins to NW of Gilmer | Wood, Upshur | TX | 32°35′57″N 95°15′47″W / 32.5991°N 95.2631°W | 21:30–22:01 | 20.63 mi (33.20 km) | 1,420 yd (1,300 m) |
| This high-end EF1 tornado began near the Sabine River Bottoms and tracked northeast, initially causing minor tree damage. It became more intense as it moved near Hawkins where numerous pine trees were snapped and one home suffered roof panel damage. The tornado continued northeast, snapping and uprooting trees, with one well-built carport failing into a home. The most significant damage was to a water bottling plant where roof damage occurred and one semi-truck driver was injured. The tornado then moved into open land with debris observed via radar as it caused further tree damage. As it crossed various roads, the tornado widened and continued causing tree damage with significant wind effects observed near Lake Gilmer where waves scoured pavement on a bridge. The tornado eventually lifted north of the lake.[69] | |||||||
| EF1 | NNW of Gilmer | Upshur | TX | 32°47′36″N 94°58′33″W / 32.7933°N 94.9759°W | 22:07 | 1.11 mi (1.79 km) | 1,272 yd (1,163 m) |
| A brief but large tornado uprooted and snapped a few trees. [69] | |||||||
| EF2 | Northern Lone Star | Morris | TX | 32°55′20″N 94°44′19″W / 32.9221°N 94.7387°W | 22:32–22:41 | 4.09 mi (6.58 km) | 673 yd (615 m) |
| This strong tornado began just north of Big Cypress Creek, downing trees and snapping trunks. It strengthened to EF2 intensity as it moved northeast, causing significant structural damage to homes, including one with a garage door buckled by tornadic winds, leading to roof removal. The tornado continued northeast, crossing Ellison Creek Reservoir and damaging a church camp, where numerous large trees were snapped and six cars were thrown 100 yards (91 m). The tornado then moved into a neighborhood, uprooting and snapping trees, causing damage to dozens of homes. It crossed US 259 and continued causing minor roof damage to a home before lifting near FM 3421.[69] | |||||||
| EF# | Location | County / parish | State | Start coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max. width |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EF2 | WSW of Colt to Levesque | St. Francis, Cross | AR | 35°07′18″N 90°51′06″W / 35.1217°N 90.8516°W | 06:34-06:53 | 12.81 mi (20.62 km) | 350 yd (320 m) |
| A strong tornado began by causing tree damage and minor roof damage to a home. It continued northeast, destroying a manufactured home along AR 306 and blowing away the debris. Several nearby homes had minor roof damage. Further damage was noted near AR 1 in Wilkins where a large outbuilding was shifted off its foundation and collapsed. The tornado also caused damage to a chemical plant, flipped a semi, and damaged numerous homes near Fitzgerald Crossing. The most significant damage in this area occurred to a very large metal outbuilding and several destroyed manufactured homes. The tornado then continued and damaged solar panels in a solar farm between AR 1 and Cathy Lake. It moved into a country club, causing significant damage and lofting a storage building 100 yards (91 m). The tornado impacted the Levesque area, destroying small outbuildings along with uprooting multiple trees before lifting just east of AR 163.[7][15] | |||||||
| EF1 | SE of Parkin to NNW of Earle | Cross, Crittenden | AR | 35°13′17″N 90°31′30″W / 35.2215°N 90.525°W | 07:03–07:10 | 5.66 mi (9.11 km) | 150 yd (140 m) |
| This tornado formed in far eastern Cross county where minor damage was reported to a farm outbuilding. The tornado moved northeast, overturning a couple of irrigation pivots before crossing railroad tracks. It intensified as it crossed U.S. Route 64, snapping several utility poles and producing significant tree damage. Additional tree damage was observed along AR 184, with damage becoming more sporadic as the tornado lifted.[7][15] | |||||||
| EF1 | SE of Tyronza to NW of Birdsong | Poinsett | AR | 35°27′22″N 90°19′24″W / 35.4561°N 90.3233°W | 07:24–07:28 | 2.6 mi (4.2 km) | 150 yd (140 m) |
| A brief tornado touched down just west of I-555, crossing the highway and knocking multiple train boxcars off their bases along the BNSF Thayer South Subdivision. The box car bases remained on the tracks. The tornado continued northeast, damaging multiple power poles before lifting.[7][15] | |||||||
| EF0 | Driver to Western Osceola | Mississippi | AR | 35°36′34″N 90°00′56″W / 35.6094°N 90.0155°W | 07:52–08:01 | 7.56 mi (12.17 km) | 150 yd (140 m) |
| This high-end EF0 tornado developed on US 61 in Driver where it did minor damage to a roof of a home. The tornado moved almost due north, downing utility poles and doing tree damage before entering Osceola, doing minor damage to fences and trees in the western portion of town before lifting.[7][15] | |||||||
| EF0 | Cherry to SW of Glimp | Lauderdale | TN | 35°40′27″N 89°42′21″W / 35.6741°N 89.7057°W | 08:15–08:17 | 1.65 mi (2.66 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
| A barn was damaged, a church had it's doors blown out and trees were uprooted along SR 371.[7][15] | |||||||
| EF1 | NE of Ripley to E of Gates | Lauderdale | TN | 35°47′17″N 89°27′03″W / 35.788°N 89.4508°W | 08:36–08:43 | 4.95 mi (7.97 km) | 150 yd (140 m) |
| Multiple barns and outbuildings had roof damage, a home lost its siding, and numerous trees were uprooted or snapped.[7][15] | |||||||
| EF1 | Southeastern Friendship | Crockett | TN | 35°52′49″N 89°15′03″W / 35.8802°N 89.2509°W | 08:49–08:56 | 2.56 mi (4.12 km) | 75 yd (69 m) |
| One tree was uprooted and several others were damaged.[7][15] | |||||||
| EF0 | SW of Big Sandy | Henry | TN | 36°10′21″N 88°12′17″W / 36.1725°N 88.2048°W | 10:16–10:20 | 1.96 mi (3.15 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
| Multiple trees were uprooted and roof damage occurred to several homes and barns.[7][15] | |||||||
| EF1 | NNE of Big Sandy | Benton | TN | 36°18′25″N 88°00′48″W / 36.3069°N 88.0134°W | 10:37–10:43 | 2.62 mi (4.22 km) | 350 yd (320 m) |
| A tornado touched down, causing a tree to snap in half and another to be uprooted. It continued to damage trees along a road before moving northeast, crossing a small cove of the Tennessee River. The tornado intensified over the cove and made landfall where it uprooted and blew over dozens of trees. The tornado lifted just before reaching the Tennessee River again.[7][15] | |||||||
| EF1 | NW of Bodcaw | Hempstead, Nevada | AR | 33°34′27″N 93°29′12″W / 33.5741°N 93.4866°W | 13:29–13:32 | 2.78 mi (4.47 km) | 375 yd (343 m) |
| A few structures were damaged, including some chicken houses, and multiple trees were damaged.[7][28] | |||||||
| EF2 | E of Fulton to NW of Hope | Hempstead | AR | 33°37′32″N 93°45′42″W / 33.6255°N 93.7618°W | 14:36–14:50 | 10.6 mi (17.1 km) | 500 yd (460 m) |
| This low-end EF2 tornado first touched down just north of I-30 and quickly moved east-northeast. The tornado's most intense damage occurred where widespread tree damage was observed with peak winds of 115 mph (185 km/h). Significant tree damage continued through the intersection of I-30 and US 278 where the tornado reached its maximum width. After this point, the tornado began weakening and gradually decreased in size with the last damage observed being minor tree damage on the north side of Hope. Along its path, the tornado caused substantial damage to hardwood and softwood trees with some outbuildings and carports also affected. A recreational vehicle was rolled and a mobile home was pushed off its foundation.[7][69] | |||||||
| EF1 | NNW of Lobelville | Humphreys | TN | 35°52′48″N 87°49′22″W / 35.8799°N 87.8227°W | 20:49–20:51 | 2.64 mi (4.25 km) | 150 yd (140 m) |
| A tornado began near I-40, snapping and uprooting numerous trees. The tornado then impacted a farmer's market, causing some damage there before dissipating in a heavily wooded area.[70] | |||||||
| EF0 | Dickson | Dickson | TN | 36°03′27″N 87°22′59″W / 36.0576°N 87.3831°W | 21:15–21:16 | 0.36 mi (0.58 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
| Several structures sustained roof and siding damage.[70] | |||||||
| EF1 | NNE of Schlater to S of Philipp | Leflore, Tallahatchie | MS | 33°40′58″N 90°19′00″W / 33.6829°N 90.3167°W | 21:49–22:00 | 7.3 mi (11.7 km) | 700 yd (640 m) |
| This high-end EF1 tornado began north of Schlater, damaging several utility poles before crossing the Tallahatchie River into Sunnyside. It destroyed a mobile home and continued across the river again back into Leflore county where it snapped a utility pole and damaged several sheds. A couple of homes also sustained roof damage and an irrigation pivot was overturned. As the tornado turned eastward, it crossed the Little Tallahatchie River, snapping and uprooting numerous trees before lifting shortly after.[7][15][71] | |||||||
| EF1 | SSW of Philipp to SSE of Cascilla | Tallahatchie, Grenada | MS | 33°44′27″N 90°12′43″W / 33.7407°N 90.2119°W | 22:00–22:14 | 14.5 mi (23.3 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
| A tornado moved east-northeastward through the Tallahatchie National Wildlife Refuge, crossing into western Grenada county and then crossing MS 8. The tornado continued across additional rural areas before crossing into southeastern Tallahatchie county. Along its path, several trees were uprooted and some smaller trees were snapped. At least one structure was damaged when a tree fell on its roof before the tornado lifted.[7][15][71] | |||||||
| EF2 | NW of Tula to Eastern New Albany to SSW of Dumas | Lafayette, Pontotoc, Union, Tippah | MS | 34°14′34″N 89°22′16″W / 34.2427°N 89.3711°W | 23:12–00:11 | 40.73 mi (65.55 km) | 600 yd (550 m) |
| This strong, long-tracked tornado formed between the communities of Cornish and Tula, initially producing minor tree damage. It quickly intensified as it crossed US 278 southeast of Lafayette Springs, snapping numerous power poles and trees and causing minor roof damage. This damage continued as the tornado crossed into northwest Pontotoc county where it caused significant damage to trees and utility poles northwest of Thaxton, especially along MS 336. As the tornado moved northeast toward Hurricane, it substantially damaged several farm outbuildings and removed part of a roof from a home. Additional tree and utility pole damage was noted along MS 346 and MS 355. The tornado then moved over forested bottomland around Mud Creek, crossing into Union county near Flatwood. Trees and a few homes and outbuildings sustained damage as well as in the Bald Hill and Fairview areas. The tornado weakened as it crossed MS 15, with damage becoming more sporadic. The circulation was still relatively weak as it crossed I-22 southeast of New Albany, but a semi truck was overturned. Minor damage to homes, trees, and utility poles was observed on the eastern side of New Albany from MS 348 to MS 30. Mostly tree damage was observed as the tornado moved northeast through Kewonville, though a few homes had minor roof damage. The tornado lifted shortly after crossing into Tippah county where large branches were broken off of a tree.[7][15] | |||||||
| EF1 | S of New Harmony to ESE of Blue Springs | Union | MS | 34°22′40″N 88°55′22″W / 34.3779°N 88.9227°W | 00:29–00:34 | 4.09 mi (6.58 km) | 300 yd (270 m) |
| A brief tornado formed just west of a Toyota plant near New Harmony where tree damage was noted along a local road. Several homes sustained minor roof damage, with one home having a couple of windows blown out. Several outbuildings were destroyed or heavily damaged and trees were uprooted or snapped. The tornado weakened as it crossed I-22, causing additional but more sporadic damage to trees and power lines before dissipating.[7][15][71] | |||||||
| EF0 | SE of Biggersville to NW of Glen | Alcorn | MS | 34°49′29″N 88°32′30″W / 34.8247°N 88.5418°W | 00:40–00:50 | 6.53 mi (10.51 km) | 150 yd (140 m) |
| Sporadic tree damage occurred.[7][15] | |||||||
| EF1 | Northern Saltillo | Lee | MS | 34°22′49″N 88°44′22″W / 34.3803°N 88.7395°W | 01:53–02:01 | 4.39 mi (7.07 km) | 550 yd (500 m) |
| This high-end EF1 tornado caused multiple trees to be uprooted before continuing eastward, with additional trees snapped and uprooted along its path. The tornado then crossed US 45, causing widespread tree damage and minor damage to a few single-family homes in a nearby neighborhood. Further northeast, sporadic tree damage was observed along MS 145 and the tornado lifted shortly after this point.[7][15] | |||||||
| EF1 | NW of Dennis | Tishomingo | MS | 34°33′49″N 88°15′41″W / 34.5635°N 88.2614°W | 02:40–02:45 | 3.12 mi (5.02 km) | 75 yd (69 m) |
| Multiple trees were damaged.[7][15] | |||||||
| EF1 | SE of Pride to Sheffield | Colbert | AL | 34°43′08″N 87°48′46″W / 34.7188°N 87.8127°W | 03:18–03:30 | 8.43 mi (13.57 km) | 275 yd (251 m) |
| A tornado began just southeast of Pride, causing significant tree damage and minor roof damage to a small farm building. As it continued eastward across Little Bear Creek, it caused widespread tree damage and structural damage to homes from fallen trees. The tornado moved through Sheffield where additional tree damage was observed before lifting just west of US 43.[72] | |||||||
| EF1 | Tuscumbia to Ford City to NW of Rogersville | Colbert, Lauderdale | AL | 34°42′36″N 87°46′40″W / 34.7099°N 87.7779°W | 03:25–03:57 | 28.76 mi (46.28 km) | 280 yd (260 m) |
| This tornado, originating from the same parent circulation as the Sheffield tornado, touched down just south of US 72 and tracked through Tuscumbia and Muscle Shoals. The tornado caused significant tree damage, including uprooted trees and snapped hardwood trunks, with wind speeds at high-end EF1 intensity. It caused widespread damage in a trailer park where large trees fell on residential units, resulting in five injuries. As it continued northward, the tornado passed through Ford City, crossing Wilson Lake, and caused more tree damage as it entered Lauderdale county. The tornado continued uprooting trees and snapping large limbs, affecting neighborhoods and damaging homes and fences. The tornado weakened as it crossed Second Creek and eventually lifted just south of Toonersville.[72] | |||||||
| EF1 | Center Star to Elgin to WNW of Rogersville | Lauderdale | AL | 34°51′26″N 87°27′36″W / 34.8572°N 87.4601°W | 03:45–03:53 | 5.76 mi (9.27 km) | 85 yd (78 m) |
| Numerous hardwood trees were uprooted and a farm shed sustained roof damage. More uprooted trees were observed east of Bluewater Creek, extending through the intersection of SR 101 and US 72. Damage after the intersection became sparse until the tornado lifted near Pine Haven Shores.[72] | |||||||
| EF# | Location | County / parish | State | Start coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max. width |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EF1 | Cowan to SE of Sewanee | Franklin | TN | 35°10′02″N 86°01′01″W / 35.1673°N 86.0169°W | 05:38–05:52 | 8.71 mi (14.02 km) | 350 yd (320 m) |
| A tornado touched down in Cowan, causing several trees to be uprooted and split. As it moved east, sporadic tree damage was observed with the tornado peaking in intensity along a lane where several large hardwood trees were uprooted and a shelter's roof was damaged by a falling tree. The tornado continued southeast, crossing roads and causing more tree damage, including trees snapped in various directions. It eventually lifted after uprooting additional trees near a ridgeline.[72] | |||||||
| EF1 | Northern Monteagle to Tracy City | Grundy | TN | 35°14′54″N 85°50′53″W / 35.2484°N 85.8481°W | 05:51–06:02 | 6.56 mi (10.56 km) | 400 yd (370 m) |
| This tornado began over northern Monteagle, causing initial damage to trees and structures as it moved eastward. It strengthened as it reached Tracy City where significant tree damage occurred and some structural damage was noted. A baseball field in Tracy City had the metal roofing for its stands completely blown off with debris scattered across the park. Several homes experienced roof damage from fallen trees and some farm outbuildings were either collapsed or had their roofs blown off. The tornado then lifted on the southside of town.[66] | |||||||
| EF1 | W of Langston | Marshall, Jackson | AL | 34°32′01″N 86°09′38″W / 34.5336°N 86.1605°W | 06:33–06:39 | 1.08 mi (1.74 km) | 175 yd (160 m) |
| This tornado developed over a cove on Guntersville Lake, initially causing significant tree damage with many trees snapped or uprooted along the shore. The tornado then destroyed a boat-slip house while also damaging nearby homes. Moving inland, the tornado continued to uproot trees, though the damage was more sporadic as it encountered elevation changes. It downed only a few trees and branches as it weakened before lifting over the lake.[72] | |||||||
| EF1 | SSE of Lake to WNW of Newton | Newton | MS | 32°16′17″N 89°17′24″W / 32.2715°N 89.29°W | 07:26–07:38 | 7.47 mi (12.02 km) | 150 yd (140 m) |
| A tornado touched down, snapping trees as it moved north-northeast. It continued across a farm, damaging chicken houses and a metal farm building. The tornado tracked towards US 80 and I-20 where it caused sporadic tree damage, uprooting a mix of softwood and hardwood trees. The tornado dissipated shortly after crossing the two highways.[7][71] | |||||||
| EF1 | ESE of New Hebron | Jefferson Davis | MS | 31°43′10″N 89°57′30″W / 31.7194°N 89.9582°W | 07:51–07:52 | 1.37 mi (2.20 km) | 300 yd (270 m) |
| This brief tornado touched down north of a road and caused damage to trees and vegetation. It continued northeastward, passing through Hebron and downing numerous trees along its path. Minor structural damage, including gutter damage and light damage to outbuildings, was noted before the tornado lifted.[7][71] | |||||||
| EF2 | WSW of De Kalb | Kemper | MS | 32°44′52″N 88°49′43″W / 32.7478°N 88.8286°W | 08:35–08:37 | 1.86 mi (2.99 km) | 300 yd (270 m) |
| This tornado began in the Cleveland community, tracking east-northeastward. It crossed MS 16, causing multiple barns to be demolished or heavily damaged and snapping or uprooting several trees. Several box trucks and tractors were turned on their sides and a home sustained minor damage. The tornado also caused significant damage to a home, including removing a large portion of the roof and causing part of the outer walls to collapse before dissipating.[7][71] | |||||||
| EF2 | W of Raleigh | Smith | MS | 32°03′07″N 89°34′58″W / 32.0519°N 89.5828°W | 08:57–09:07 | 3.54 mi (5.70 km) | 500 yd (460 m) |
| A strong tornado caused minor tree damage and snapped both hardwood and softwood trees as it touched down. It then moved north, snapping and uprooting trees in a concentrated area as it intensified. It caused significant damage to several homes, including a brick home where the roof was removed, windows were blown out, and an RV was thrown through a metal outbuilding. A second home also sustained roof damage and another RV was thrown into a porch, causing it to collapse. The tornado weakened as it approached MS 18, leaving only minor tree damage before dissipating shortly after crossing the highway.[7][71] | |||||||
| EF2 | WNW of Soso to Stringer to E of Bay Springs | Jones, Smith, Jasper | MS | 31°47′49″N 89°20′57″W / 31.7969°N 89.3493°W | 09:43–10:10 | 15.22 mi (24.49 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
| 1 death – This strong tornado began near Summerland, uprooting trees along MS 28, and then moved northeast across rural areas of Smith county. It crossed into Jasper county, where it initially caused roof damage, primarily removing shingles. The tornado fluctuated between EF0 and EF1 intensity with more tree damage reported along its path. Upon an abrupt leftward turn, it intensified to EF2 strength near a community southwest of Stringer, where a mobile home was knocked off its blocks and slid several feet while another was completely destroyed and launched onto two parked vehicles, killing its occupant. The tornado then continued northeast, severely damaging a two-story brick house by removing the roof and knocking down the back wall. It moved on, weakening as it passed through the Lake Como area and dissipated shortly after crossing MS 528.[7][71] | |||||||
| EF0 | SE of Soso | Jones | MS | 31°43′01″N 89°16′24″W / 31.7169°N 89.2732°W | 10:13–10:21 | 4.56 mi (7.34 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
| A high-end EF0 tornado touched down south of MS 29 where it downed trees and limbs as it moved northeast. The tornado caused light damage to trees and vegetation along its path. The most significant damage occurred near the tornado's endpoint where a large farm outbuilding had its west-facing anchors pulled from the ground and was flipped over before the tornado dissipated.[7][71] | |||||||
| EF2 | Northern Glendale to N of Petal | Forrest | MS | 31°22′22″N 89°19′48″W / 31.3729°N 89.33°W | 10:57–11:06 | 6.45 mi (10.38 km) | 400 yd (370 m) |
| This strong tornado touched down east of I-59, causing tree damage and knocking over a billboard sign. It continued northeast, uprooting trees and causing shingle damage to roofs in several areas. After crossing the Leaf River, the tornado reached low-end EF2 intensity, causing significant roof damage to two homes and overturning two RVs. The tornado also snapped and uprooted numerous trees. After crossing US 11, it damaged a mobile home and a large construction building. The tornado continued northeast, damaging more trees before dissipating.[71] | |||||||
| EF1 | Energy | Clarke | MS | 32°10′58″N 88°32′54″W / 32.1829°N 88.5482°W | 11:42–11:43 | 0.87 mi (1.40 km) | 150 yd (140 m) |
| A brief tornado touched down in the community of Energy, damaging a shed near the intersection of MS 514 and a county road. As the tornado moved northeast along MS 514, tree damage became more concentrated and a metal outbuilding sustained roof damage. The tornado continued to uproot several trees and damaged another shed before dissipating.[7][71] | |||||||
| EF2 | E of Increase, MS to N of Yantley, AL | Lauderdale (MS), Choctaw (AL) | MS, AL | 32°14′10″N 88°28′38″W / 32.2362°N 88.4771°W | 11:54–12:02 | 5.27 mi (8.48 km) | 800 yd (730 m) |
| A strong tornado initially caused minor tree damage with broken branches and uprooted softwood trees. It intensified as it moved north, causing significant damage by snapping numerous trees. Several homes experienced roof damage with more than a fifth of their roofing material lost. The tornado took an easterly turn near MS 19, weakening but continuing to cause tree damage. It crossed the state line at MS 19/SR 10, continuing its path in Alabama and causing further tree damage before dissipating.[7][71][73] | |||||||
| EF1 | Pine Hill | Wilcox | AL | 31°58′53″N 87°35′28″W / 31.9814°N 87.5911°W | 13:58–13:59 | 0.51 mi (0.82 km) | 75 yd (69 m) |
| This tornado touched down in Pine Hill where a few trees were uprooted in a weak convergent pattern. It then continued east, causing weak tree damage before intensifying as it crossed SR 5. Upon crossing the highway, several large softwood pines were snapped and minor damage was observed to a home as the tornado dissipated.[7][74] | |||||||
| EF1 | Northern Pine Hill | Wilcox | AL | 31°59′31″N 87°34′45″W / 31.992°N 87.5792°W | 13:59–14:04 | 1.22 mi (1.96 km) | 150 yd (140 m) |
| A high-end EF1 tornado began in the woods behind an intersection, causing damage to large hardwood limbs and uprooting small trees. An unattached awning from a gas station was lofted and thrown about 50 yards (46 m) into a tree. After crossing SR 5, the tornado caused roof damage to a restaurant and continued producing tree damage, including uprooted and snapped hardwood trees. Upon crossing SR 10, additional tree damage occurred. The most significant damage took place as the tornado crossed an area where numerous large hardwood and softwood trees were uprooted and snapped. A single-wide manufactured home was rolled, though it was not properly secured. The tornado likely continued northeast into the woods, where survey crews were unable to assess further damage.[7][74] | |||||||
| EF1 | NE of Sardis | Dallas | AL | 32°17′27″N 86°57′26″W / 32.2907°N 86.9572°W | 15:13–15:15 | 1.32 mi (2.12 km) | 400 yd (370 m) |
| Two buildings suffered minor roof damage and several trees were snapped or uprooted.[7][75] | |||||||
| EF0 | W of Big Point to S of Hurley | Jackson | MS | 30°35′N 88°32′W / 30.59°N 88.53°W | 19:43–19:47 | 2.97 mi (4.78 km) | 25 yd (23 m) |
| A weak tornado caused minor and patchy tree damage. It produced high snaps, large broken branches, and a few uprooted trees, with the strongest damage occurring right after it touched down. Additional scattered damage was observed in tree tops, but as the tornado weakened, only small branches and debris were left in its path. The tornado ultimately dissipated near a park area.[7][76] | |||||||
| EF1 | Northeastern Columbus | Muscogee | GA | 32°32′40″N 84°51′48″W / 32.5445°N 84.8633°W | 19:56–20:00 | 2.62 mi (4.22 km) | 350 yd (320 m) |
| A tornado touched down just northeast of downtown Columbus, initially impacting the Beaver Run neighborhood. Numerous trees were snapped or uprooted with a few homes sustaining tree damage. The tornado continued northeast, crossing the Bull Creek Golf Course, where it caused widespread tree damage. The tornado continued along US 27, causing additional tree damage before weakening and dissipating soon thereafter.[7][77] | |||||||
| EF1 | WNW of Huber to N of Dry Branch | Twiggs, Bibb | GA | 32°44′33″N 83°35′10″W / 32.7426°N 83.5861°W | 21:45–22:03 | 7.94 mi (12.78 km) | 450 yd (410 m) |
| A tornado developed in the Bond Swamp National Wildlife Refuge and moved into northern Twiggs county, beginning near the Bibb-Twiggs county line. The tornado caused significant tree damage, including snapped and uprooted trees along US 23, bringing down powerlines. It continued northeast, impacting areas near the broadcast towers and I-16, causing more tree damage. The tornado continued causing widespread tree damage before crossing US 80. It continued through an unpopulated area with tree farms, with weak damage being observed. The tornado weakened as it moved northeast with only minor tree damage noted before dissipating.[7][77] | |||||||
| EF0 | SE of Perote | Barbour | AL | 31°54′03″N 85°37′24″W / 31.9009°N 85.6234°W | 03:21–03:23 | 0.48 mi (0.77 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
| A very brief tornado touched down within Star Hill, causing some tree damage.[7][75] | |||||||
| EF# | Location | County / parish | State | Start coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max. width |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EF0 | ENE of Hilton to WSW of Blakely | Early | GA | 31°17′42″N 85°02′38″W / 31.295°N 85.0439°W | 10:46–10:56 | 7.4 mi (11.9 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
| An elementary school had minor damage and a few pine trees were snapped.[78] | |||||||
| EF1 | E of Haralson to NW of Experiment | Coweta, Fayette, Spalding | GA | 33°13′40″N 84°31′26″W / 33.2279°N 84.524°W | 11:22–11:38 | 14.1 mi (22.7 km) | 250 yd (230 m) |
| A tornado began in southeastern Coweta county where it snapped trees near a house and outbuilding. The tornado continued east-northeast into Spalding county, crossing several roads and uprooting and snapping trees, some of which fell onto homes. The tornado briefly crossed into Fayette county before crossing back into Spalding county, intensifying as it continued uprooting and snapping more trees. The tornado then weakened as it crossed a couple of roads, causing sporadic tree damage before lifting.[7][77] | |||||||
| EF0 | S of Sunny Side to WNW of Towalaga | Spalding | GA | 33°19′17″N 84°18′41″W / 33.3213°N 84.3113°W | 11:38–11:44 | 4.3 mi (6.9 km) | 100 yd (91 m) |
| This weak tornado initially snapped a few trees along its path before crossing US 19. It then downed several trees, including one of which fell onto a home. The tornado continued into a mostly wooded and inaccessible area, snapping trees as it crossed additional roads. As it approached Cole Reservoir, the tornado weakened before dissipating.[7][77] | |||||||
| EF0 | Northern Locust Grove | Henry | GA | 33°22′23″N 84°09′26″W / 33.373°N 84.1571°W | 11:48–11:50 | 1.62 mi (2.61 km) | 75 yd (69 m) |
| A weak tornado touched down, snapping trees along its path. It crossed I-75, causing additional tree damage and tossing construction barrels onto the highway. The tornado lifted before reaching US 23.[7][77] | |||||||
| EF1 | NE of Cairo to NW of Ochlocknee | Grady, Thomas | GA | 30°57′09″N 84°09′52″W / 30.9525°N 84.1645°W | 15:02–15:11 | 4.43 mi (7.13 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
| This high-end EF1 tornado touched down in a wooded area just west of SR 111 in northeastern Grady county, causing some initial damage to structures and trees. It intensified as it moved east, producing concentrated damage near a road intersection where a single-wide mobile home was completely destroyed. The tornado lifted the mobile home’s support frame out of the ground and caused damage to other homes in the area. It continued to cause significant tree damage, snapping pine and oak trees and damaging several residences along its path. The tornado weakened as it crossed into Thomas county with the last damage occurring near smaller pine trees as it dissipated.[78] | |||||||
| EF1 | SSE of Bloxham to SW of Ochlockonee | Leon | FL | 30°20′17″N 84°36′16″W / 30.3381°N 84.6045°W | 15:27–15:49 | 12.22 mi (19.67 km) | 200 yd (180 m) |
| A tornado touched down in the Apalachicola National Forest, causing minor tree damage and roof damage in a neighborhood as it tracked northeast. It crossed SR 267, continuing to uproot trees and damage branches along its path. The tornado dissipated near SR 20. Many of the damage points in the forest were inaccessible by vehicle but were estimated using radar data.[7][78] | |||||||
| EF1 | N of Chastain | Colquitt | GA | 31°05′55″N 83°57′18″W / 31.0986°N 83.9551°W | 15:28–15:30 | 0.91 mi (1.46 km) | 150 yd (140 m) |
| A tornado began in a wooded area, snapping and uprooting large pines, some of which fell on a home and outbuilding. It continued northeast, causing roof shingle loss and minor damage to a storage shed at another residence. After crossing SR 202, the tornado weakened but still caused occasional damage to pine trees, eventually toppling an irrigation pivot system as it lifted.[78] | |||||||
| EF1 | N of Bradfordville, FL to SSE of Beachton, GA | Leon (FL), Grady (GA) | FL, GA | 30°36′36″N 84°13′56″W / 30.6099°N 84.2323°W | 16:16–16:27 | 8.6 mi (13.8 km) | 150 yd (140 m) |
| This tornado touched down in the Killearn Lakes neighborhood where it snapped and uprooted several trees, some of which fell on homes. It continued northeast, causing additional damage to homes and trees. As it moved northeast, it crossed over Lake Iamonia and then US 319, snapping and uprooting pine trees along the way. The tornado continued through the area, crossing more roads before lifting over a private plantation just over the Georgia state line.[78] | |||||||
| EF0 | Waycross | Ware | GA | 31°12′49″N 82°20′46″W / 31.2136°N 82.3461°W | 23:03–23:08 | 1.72 mi (2.77 km) | 20 yd (18 m) |
| A high-end EF0 tornado began in Waycross where it caused damage by snapping softwood trees and large branches that fell on homes. As it moved northeast, it damaged roofs, gutters, and siding on homes along several streets. It also uprooted hardwood trees and damaged fences along other streets. The tornado caused partial roof damage in the northeastern part of the area and dissipated shortly thereafter.[7][79] | |||||||
| EF# | Location | County / parish | State | Start coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max. width |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EF1 | Princeton | Gibson | IN | 38°22′10″N 87°34′08″W / 38.3695°N 87.5689°W | 20:49–20:52 | 1.18 mi (1.90 km) | 125 yd (114 m) |
| This tornado touched down by Princeton Community High School, damaging its roof before moving southeastward through northeastern Princeton, causing considerable tree damage and downing power lines throughout town. An outbuilding was collapsed and an electrical pole broken. Several structures in town suffered roof damage as well.[80] | |||||||
| EF# | Location | County / parish | State | Start coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max. width |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EF3 | ENE of Bennington to Nashville to ESE of Fort Calhoun | Douglas, Washington | NE | 41°23′19″N 96°05′26″W / 41.3886°N 96.0906°W | 23:55–00:15 | 8.26 mi (13.29 km) | 170 yd (160 m) |
| An intense tornado touched down near N-133, initially causing tree damage by snapping limbs. It moved eastward, continuing to damage trees and homes, including the destruction of a garage. The tornado caused significant tree damage along Little Papillion Creek and impacted a home and large garage, with the most intense damage observed at a well-built all-brick home, which was destroyed with only some walls remaining. A nearby large garage was completely destroyed as well. The tornado continued due east, destroying another large shed and removing the roof from a brick home. It then caused significant damage between two homes, destroying a large garage, lifting and moving a pickup truck approximately 30 yards (27 m), and throwing large trees nearly 0.25 miles (0.40 km) downstream. The tornado weakened slightly as it caused more tree damage and destroyed several outbuildings. It then continued to the northeast, snapping more trees, flipping recreational vehicles, and damaging another home and outbuildings before dissipating in a field.[81] | |||||||
| EF0 | NE of Alvo | Cass | NE | 40°52′57″N 96°22′22″W / 40.8826°N 96.3728°W | 00:14–00:16 | 0.84 mi (1.35 km) | 50 yd (46 m) |
| This weak tornado was recorded, doing minimal damage to trees.[81] | |||||||
| EFU | SW of Murdock | Cass | NE | 40°53′41″N 96°19′30″W / 40.8946°N 96.3249°W | 00:20–00:22 | 1.31 mi (2.11 km) | [to be determined] |
| A brief tornado remained over open fields.[81] | |||||||
| EF0 | W of Manley | Cass | NE | 40°54′43″N 96°12′56″W / 40.9119°N 96.2155°W | 00:36–00:41 | 2.25 mi (3.62 km) | 75 yd (69 m) |
| An intermittent tornado did some damage to a few groupings of trees.[81] | |||||||
| EF0 | SW of Tabor to SW of Randolph | Fremont | IA | 40°51′49″N 95°42′52″W / 40.8636°N 95.7144°W | 01:13–01:28 | 5.48 mi (8.82 km) | 440 yd (400 m) |
| A dusty, high-end EF0 tornado inflicted weak damage to roofs and farm outbuildings, flipped irrigation pivots and damaged trees.[82] | |||||||
| EF1 | SE of Randolph to Nyman | Fremont, Page | IA | 40°51′08″N 95°32′21″W / 40.8523°N 95.5391°W | 01:32–02:08 | 19.72 mi (31.74 km) | 1,971 yd (1,802 m) |
| A large, high-end EF1 tornado initially snapped tree limbs around Lake Shawtee. As it moved east, the tornado caused continued tree damage and affected small outdoor farm buildings and house roofs. The most significant damage occurred south of Imogene, where wooden power poles were snapped, homes sustained minor damage, and several outdoor buildings and trees were damaged. The tornado continued causing more damage to wooden power poles and farm buildings as it began turning northeastward. It continued into Nyman, where trees and outdoor buildings were damaged, along with snapped wooden power poles, before lifting just northeast of town.[82] | |||||||
| EF# | Location | County / parish | State | Start coord. | Time (UTC) | Path length | Max. width |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EF0 | E of Mentor | Greene | MO | 37°06′21″N 93°10′44″W / 37.1057°N 93.179°W | 03:15–03:16 | 0.22 mi (0.35 km) | [to be determined] |
| A brief tornado broke some tree branches and damaged a few outbuildings.[83] | |||||||