About MeteoAlerts
MeteoAlerts is a free, non-commercial project that aggregates official weather warnings and natural disaster alerts from 100+ sources across 50+ countries and displays them on a single interactive map.
What we do
Every 15 minutes, our servers fetch active alerts from over 100 official sources — NOAA (USA), ECCC (Canada), Meteoalarm (34 European countries), met.no (Norway), JMA (Japan), CMA (China), BMKG (Indonesia), UK Environment Agency, BOM (Australia), NASA EONET, USGS Earthquakes, NIFC Wildfires, GDACS, GeoNet (New Zealand), INGV (Italy), and many others. We normalize the data into a unified format, automatically translate into 5 languages, and present it in a consistent, accessible way.
What we cover
MeteoAlerts tracks 18 types of hazards worldwide:
- Weather — storms, thunderstorms, wind, rain, snow, fog, frost, ice, heat, cold, dust
- Natural disasters — earthquakes, floods, wildfires, volcanoes, tsunamis, avalanches
- Coastal hazards — storm surge, high tides, dangerous waves
- Tropical cyclones — hurricanes, typhoons, cyclones
Who it's for
- Travelers planning trips who need to know about weather hazards at their destination
- Logistics and transport companies monitoring shipping and delivery routes
- Aviation and marine professionals tracking conditions across regions
- Emergency responders needing a global overview of active threats
- Researchers and journalists studying weather patterns and disaster response
- Anyone who wants to stay informed about severe weather and natural disasters worldwide
Data sources
All data comes directly from official national meteorological agencies, seismological institutes, and disaster monitoring organizations — the authoritative bodies responsible for issuing public warnings in their respective countries. Each alert displayed on MeteoAlerts includes attribution to its source, and links back to the original publication where available.
Limitations
We do our best to display alerts accurately and promptly, but MeteoAlerts is not a replacement for official warning systems in your country. In a life-threatening emergency, always follow the guidance of your local authorities and your national weather service. Data transmission delays, translation errors, and temporary service outages can occur.
Contact
Questions, suggestions, or spotted a bug? We'd love to hear from you — drop us a line through our contact form.