2024’s violent tornado season has been one of the most active on record − a meteorologist explains the weather behind the outbreaks (2024)

Spring 2024 was unnerving for people across large parts of the U.S. as tornado warnings and sirens sent them scrambling for safety.

More than 1,100 tornadoes were reported through May − a preliminary number but nearly twice the 30-year average at that point and behind only 2011, when deadly tornado outbreaks tore across the southeastern U.S.

The U.S. experienced several multistate outbreaks in 2024. Tornadoes damaged homes from Texas to Minnesota and east to West Virginia and Georgia. They caused widespread destruction in several towns, including Greenfield, Iowa; Westmoreland, Kansas; and Bartlesville, Oklahoma. Barnsdall, Oklahoma, was hit twice in two months.

In May, at least one tornado occurred somewhere in the country almost every day.

What causes some years to have so many tornadoes? I’m a meteorologist who studies tornadoes and thunderstorms. Here’s what created the perfect conditions for these violent storms.

2 key tornado ingredients, on steroids

The hyperactive season has been due to an abundance of two key ingredients for tornadoes: wind shear and instability.

The jet stream − a band of strong upper-level winds that mostly blows west to east, flowing between warm air to its south and cool air to its north − plays an important role in how and where weather systems evolve, and in wind shear.

During April and May 2024, the jet stream often dipped southward in the western U.S. before turning back to the northeast across the Plains. That’s a pattern favorable for producing tornadoes in the central U.S.

In the area east of the jet stream’s southern dip, air rises. That creates a strong low-pressure system, which causes winds near the ground to blow from a different direction than winds higher up, contributing to wind shear.

Making this year even more active, persistent record heat waves were common over Mexico and Texas, while the Rockies and far northern United States stayed cool. The sharp temperature difference created a stronger jet stream than normal, leading to strong changes in wind speed with elevation. As a result, wind shear has been on steroids.

The change in wind speed with elevation can cause air to have a rolling motion. The rapidly rising air in a thunderstorm can then tilt the rolling motion to create a spinning thunderstorm that can concentrate the spin into a tornado.

The Gulf of Mexico was also much warmer than normal, producing abundant heat and moisture that could be transported northward to fuel thunderstorms. That creates atmospheric instability, the other key ingredient for tornadoes.

El Niño’s weakening was a warning

This perfect combination of ingredients for tornadoes wasn’t a complete surprise.

El Niño and La Niña – opposing climate patterns centered in the Pacific Ocean – can affect winds and weather around the world. A 2016 study found that when El Niño is shifting to La Niña, the number of tornadoes in the central Plains and Upper Midwest is often larger than normal.

That’s exactly what was happening in spring 2024. The tornadoes mostly occurred in the traditional Tornado Alley, from northern Texas to South Dakota, with an extension across the Corn Belt through Iowa and as far east as Ohio, matching the findings of that study.

How is tornado activity changing?

The active spring in the Great Plains was a bit unusual, however. Studies show a long-term trend of decreasing tornado numbers in this region and an increase in tornadoes farther east, near or just east of the Mississippi River.

That shift is consistent with what climate models suggest is likely to happen throughout the remainder of the century as global temperatures rise.

2024’s violent tornado season has been one of the most active on record − a meteorologist explains the weather behind the outbreaks (3)

The expected decline in the number of tornadoes in the Plains is likely related to increasing heat over the high ground of the desert Southwest and Mexico. That heat flows over the Great Plains a few thousand feet above ground, creating a cap, or lid. The cap lets heat and moisture build up until it punches through to form a thunderstorm. This hot, moist air is why the central U.S. is home to the most violent tornadoes on Earth.

One theory is that, with climate change, the cap will likely be harder to break through, reducing the number of tornadoes in the Plains. At the same time, increasing heat and moisture elsewhere will fuel more tornadoes in the East.

Long-term trends and climate model predictions also suggest that more tornadoes are occurring during the cooler months, particularly in the Southeast. Tornadoes are also occurring on fewer days each year, but on the days when they do form, there is more likely to be an outbreak with several tornadoes

2024’s violent tornado season has been one of the most active on record − a meteorologist explains the weather behind the outbreaks (2024)

FAQs

2024’s violent tornado season has been one of the most active on record − a meteorologist explains the weather behind the outbreaks? ›

During April and May 2024, the jet stream often dipped southward in the western U.S. before turning back to the northeast across the Plains. That's a pattern favorable for producing tornadoes in the central U.S. In the area east of the jet stream's southern dip, air rises.

Which month has the most tornadoes and which has the most violent tornadoes? ›

Statistics show that the least likely month for a tornado dangerous enough to take lives is July, and the most likely is April. Note that this distribution is different than the monthly distribution for ALL tornadoes. On that graph, which is below, May is the month that has the most tornadoes.

During which season is the frequency of tornadoes the highest? ›

Tornado season usually refers to the time of year the U.S. sees the most tornadoes. The peak “tornado season” for the southern Plains (e.g., Texas, Oklahoma, and Kansas) is from May into early June. On the Gulf coast, it is earlier in the spring.

What weather is a tornado most likely to occur? ›

Strong and violent tornadoes are most likely to occur with supercell thunderstorms, but tornadoes also can occur within bowing lines of storms (i.e., bow echoes). Tornadoes originate from the energy released in a thunderstorm, however they account for only a small fraction of the total energy within a storm.

Which two seasons are the most favorable for tornado formation in the US at what time of day do most tornadoes occur? ›

They occur mostly during the spring and summer; the tornado season comes early in the south and later in the north because spring comes later in the year as one moves northward. They usually occur during the late afternoon and early evening.

What state has the most tornadoes in 2024? ›

The majority of tornadoes in 2024 have touched down in Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas. Ohio has also experienced a surge in tornadoes, with 54 reports so far. Preliminary tornado reports by state between Jan. 1 and May 8, 2024.

Where do the most violent tornadoes occur? ›

The Great Plains, the Midwest, the Mississippi Valley and the southern United States are all areas that are vulnerable to tornadoes. They are relatively rare west of the Rockies and are also less frequent in the northeastern states. Tornado Alley is a colloquial term for an area particularly prone to tornadoes.

What was the most active year for tornadoes? ›

The most confirmed tornadoes in a single year was in 2004, which had 1817 confirmed tornadoes. This was mostly boosted by a large tornado outbreak sequence in May 2004, where 509 tornadoes occurred. It also had help from a very active fall and winter tornado season.

What state has never had a tornado? ›

All US States have experienced tornadoes, according to the National Weather Service. The State with the fewest tornadoes reported is Alaska. Only four tornadoes have been reported there since 1950. On the other end of the spectrum lay Texas and Kansas.

What are 3 weather conditions for a tornado? ›

The key atmospheric ingredients that lead to tornado potential are instability - warm moist air near the ground, with cooler dry air aloft and wind shear - a change in wind speed and/or direction with height.

Can a tornado pick you up? ›

The vertical winds in tornadoes are capable of temporarily lifting heavy objects such as automobiles or even people hundreds of feet off the ground. They are also strong enough to carry lightweight objects miles away from their original location.

Can a tornado pick up a train? ›

EF3: A tornado becomes EF3 when the wind speed reaches 136–165 mph. With this power, the tornado can blow structures away and overturn trains.

Which US state has the most tornadoes per year? ›

The two most active states for tornadoes are Texas, with 124, and Kansas, with 87, in an average year. They are both located in the heart of Tornado Alley, a nickname given to an area in the Plains between Central Texas and South Dakota that has some of the most tornadic activity in the world.

What is the deadliest year for tornadoes? ›

The 25 Deadliest U.S. Tornadoes
  • 18 Mar 1925.
  • 06 May 1840.
  • 27 May 1896.
  • 05 Apr 1936.
  • 06 Apr 1936.
  • 09 Apr 1947.
  • 22 May 2011.
  • 24 Apr 1908.

What time of year is worst for tornadoes? ›

Peak activity will move into the southern and central Plains states in May and June before shifting into the Northern Plains states and Midwest during the summer. While tornadoes can happen at any time of year, they are most common from March to July, each year.

Which month's twisters are the most violent? ›

April, May and June are typically the most active and dangerous months of the year for tornadoes in the United States. Strong tornadoes can occur in any month, as we saw in early March when 19 people were killed by an EF4 twister in Putnam County, Tennessee.

Which month has the most EF5 tornadoes? ›

That's about one tornado out of every 1,666. —The months of January and November are the only months never to have reported an F/EF5 tornado. April, May, and June account for 84% of all F/EF5 tornadoes on record since 1880. —Only 20 states and one Canadian province have experienced a F/EF5 tornado since 1880.

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