Tornadoes are relatively uncommon in Wet Virginia, averaging roughly two per year. Although tornadoes have occurred in every month of the year in West Virginia; they are most common between the months of
April and
July[1].The strongest tornadoes confirmed in West Virginia were two F4 tornadoes, both in the northern part of the state and both occurring on
June 23, 1944.
Climatology
As of June 2024, there have been at least 192 tornadoes confirmed in the state of West Virginia since 1875. Recorded events have increased in frequency due to more cameras and cell phones, as well as drone surveying tools. In 2024, there were 18 tornadoes in the state, breaking the record for most annual tornadoes, previously set in 1998 with 14 twisters.[2] From 1993 to 2022, the state averaged two tornadoes per year.[3]
August 11, 1875 – The first ever recorded tornado event occurred when a twister touched down in
Ritchie County.[2]
1950-1959
1960-1969
February 25, 1961 – The only known tornado to ever occur in West Virginia during the month of February struck Fayette County as an EF2. [6]
1970-1979
April 4, 1974 – Six tornadoes were confirmed in the early morning hours of April 4; all of the tornadoes were in southern West Virginia. The highest rating was an F3. There was one fatality in Fayette County. [7][8][9][10][11]
June 2, 1998 – Six tornadoes touched down across West Virginia. At the time, it tied the record set in
1974 for the largest tornado outbreak ever to occur in the state. A record which would stand until a tornado outbreak in
April 2024 produced 10 tornadoes. [14]
2000-2009
2010-2019
September 16, 2010 – An EF3 tornado occurred in Wood and Wirt Counties. This tornado was the strongest tornado in an outbreak that resulted in five tornadoes in Ohio. One person died on the West Virginia side of the Ohio River. The last direct death from a tornado in West Virginia was in June of 1982. A sixth tornado affected
Wirt County, West Virginia. [15][16]
April 27, 2011 – West Virginia was on the northern fringe of the large severe weather outbreak that occurred across the southern states, northeast into Virginia. A strengthening low pressure center tracked from Arkansas to Ohio. A strong wind flow existed aloft. During most of the daylight hours on April 27, the convection remained weak in West Virginia. As mid and upper level dynamics increased late in the afternoon and early evening, a large area of showers streaked northeast into West Virginia. Heavier convection was embedded on the southeastern inflow flank of this large area of rain. This affected the mountainous counties. Straight line wind damage was common in
Raleigh County north into
Randolph County. The most damage was in the city of
Elkins from straight line winds. A short lived EF1 tornado was confirmed in
Nicholas County, which was the only tornado confirmed in West Virginia from the outbreak. This was also the first tornado confirmed in Nicholas County since 1969. [17]
March 2, 2012 – Three tornadoes occurred in West Virginia. Including an EF3 tornado (the same tornado that severely damaged
West Liberty, Kentucky which crossed the state line from Kentucky into West Virginia, causing damage to the
Cove Gap area before dissipating in
Lincoln County near
Ranger. A second EF1 tornado tracked through the central part of Lincoln County. The third tornado was a long tracked EF3 tornado that damaged
Salyersville, Kentucky and briefly crossed into
Mingo County as it was dissipating [18]. There were no fatalities in West Virginia from this tornado outbreak.
June 4, 2014 – A brief EF1 tornado damaged a structure and also caused considerable tree damage in the
Ona area of
Cabell County[19].
June 18, 2015 – An EF1 tornado briefly touched down in
Upshur County causing damage to trees and to a couple of buildings in the
Queens area.
December 23, 2015 – A short-lived EF0 tornado struck
Wood County. This tornado was only the third tornado on record to strike West Virginia in the month of December, and the first since 1978. [20][21]
June 23, 2016 – A brief EF1 tornado touched down in the
Kenna area of
Jackson County. The brief tornado lifted and rolled a
single-wide trailer, injuring its two occupants; minor damage occurred elsewhere along its path. The tornado was part of the same storm system that caused devastating flooding across the state. [26][27]
June 23, 2017 – Three tornadoes touched down in northern West Virginia. The tornadoes were associated with the remnants of
Tropical Storm Cindy. [31][32][33]
June 27, 2018 – A short lived weak EF0 tornado touched down in
Monongalia County. Winds were estimated to be between 65 and 70 mph. [35]
June 24, 2019 – Two tornadoes touched down in
Kanawha County; an EF1 tornado touched down near
Alum Creek and traveled northeast dissipating near the
Kanawha River. Shortly after, a second tornado, this one an EF0; caused damage near
Yeager Airport. [36]
2020-present
May 3, 2021 – A short lived EF1 tornado touched down in the
Ranson community in
Jefferson County. Along Robelei Drive just west of
West Virginia Route 115/Mildred Street. One homeowner with a personal home anemometer measured an unofficial 68mph wind gust. In addition, one person was injured[37].
June 14, 2021 – A short lived EF0 tornado touched down in
Marion County near
Fairmont. Considerable tree damage was reported, especially along Stoney Road.
August 1, 2022 – A short lived EF2 tornado touched down along the
Marshall-
Ohio County line before crossing into
Pennsylvania and dissipating shortly thereafter [39][40].
April 2, 2024 – 10 tornadoes touched down throughout the state; making this the largest tornado outbreak in state history. The strongest tornado during this event was a high end EF2 in
Fayette County. Many of the tornadoes were as the result of a
derecho which moved through the state during the mid-morning hours. Aside from the tornadoes, there was also widespread straight line wind damage as well. No one died but two people were injured by the tornadoes. [42][43]
May 9, 2024 – An EF1 tornado struck rural areas of
Wood County which flipped a mobile home, causing minor injuries to one person. [44]
May 26, 2024 – A brief EF0 tornado was confirmed in the
Winfield area of
Putnam County as a large squall line moved through. [45][46]
The following is a chart showing West Virginia tornadoes by month or by time period. Although at the moment, it only includes 10 of the tornadoes that impacted in April of 2024; 2 in May 2024; and 3 in June. [48]
Recorded tornadoes affecting West Virginia by month
Month
Number of tornadoes
January
2
February
1
March
12
April
29
May
18
June
55
July
38
August
22
September
10
October
6
November
1
December
3
Recorded tornadoes affecting West Virginia by time period
Tornadoes are relatively uncommon in Wet Virginia, averaging roughly two per year. Although tornadoes have occurred in every month of the year in West Virginia; they are most common between the months of
April and
July[1].The strongest tornadoes confirmed in West Virginia were two F4 tornadoes, both in the northern part of the state and both occurring on
June 23, 1944.
Climatology
As of June 2024, there have been at least 192 tornadoes confirmed in the state of West Virginia since 1875. Recorded events have increased in frequency due to more cameras and cell phones, as well as drone surveying tools. In 2024, there were 18 tornadoes in the state, breaking the record for most annual tornadoes, previously set in 1998 with 14 twisters.[2] From 1993 to 2022, the state averaged two tornadoes per year.[3]
August 11, 1875 – The first ever recorded tornado event occurred when a twister touched down in
Ritchie County.[2]
1950-1959
1960-1969
February 25, 1961 – The only known tornado to ever occur in West Virginia during the month of February struck Fayette County as an EF2. [6]
1970-1979
April 4, 1974 – Six tornadoes were confirmed in the early morning hours of April 4; all of the tornadoes were in southern West Virginia. The highest rating was an F3. There was one fatality in Fayette County. [7][8][9][10][11]
June 2, 1998 – Six tornadoes touched down across West Virginia. At the time, it tied the record set in
1974 for the largest tornado outbreak ever to occur in the state. A record which would stand until a tornado outbreak in
April 2024 produced 10 tornadoes. [14]
2000-2009
2010-2019
September 16, 2010 – An EF3 tornado occurred in Wood and Wirt Counties. This tornado was the strongest tornado in an outbreak that resulted in five tornadoes in Ohio. One person died on the West Virginia side of the Ohio River. The last direct death from a tornado in West Virginia was in June of 1982. A sixth tornado affected
Wirt County, West Virginia. [15][16]
April 27, 2011 – West Virginia was on the northern fringe of the large severe weather outbreak that occurred across the southern states, northeast into Virginia. A strengthening low pressure center tracked from Arkansas to Ohio. A strong wind flow existed aloft. During most of the daylight hours on April 27, the convection remained weak in West Virginia. As mid and upper level dynamics increased late in the afternoon and early evening, a large area of showers streaked northeast into West Virginia. Heavier convection was embedded on the southeastern inflow flank of this large area of rain. This affected the mountainous counties. Straight line wind damage was common in
Raleigh County north into
Randolph County. The most damage was in the city of
Elkins from straight line winds. A short lived EF1 tornado was confirmed in
Nicholas County, which was the only tornado confirmed in West Virginia from the outbreak. This was also the first tornado confirmed in Nicholas County since 1969. [17]
March 2, 2012 – Three tornadoes occurred in West Virginia. Including an EF3 tornado (the same tornado that severely damaged
West Liberty, Kentucky which crossed the state line from Kentucky into West Virginia, causing damage to the
Cove Gap area before dissipating in
Lincoln County near
Ranger. A second EF1 tornado tracked through the central part of Lincoln County. The third tornado was a long tracked EF3 tornado that damaged
Salyersville, Kentucky and briefly crossed into
Mingo County as it was dissipating [18]. There were no fatalities in West Virginia from this tornado outbreak.
June 4, 2014 – A brief EF1 tornado damaged a structure and also caused considerable tree damage in the
Ona area of
Cabell County[19].
June 18, 2015 – An EF1 tornado briefly touched down in
Upshur County causing damage to trees and to a couple of buildings in the
Queens area.
December 23, 2015 – A short-lived EF0 tornado struck
Wood County. This tornado was only the third tornado on record to strike West Virginia in the month of December, and the first since 1978. [20][21]
June 23, 2016 – A brief EF1 tornado touched down in the
Kenna area of
Jackson County. The brief tornado lifted and rolled a
single-wide trailer, injuring its two occupants; minor damage occurred elsewhere along its path. The tornado was part of the same storm system that caused devastating flooding across the state. [26][27]
June 23, 2017 – Three tornadoes touched down in northern West Virginia. The tornadoes were associated with the remnants of
Tropical Storm Cindy. [31][32][33]
June 27, 2018 – A short lived weak EF0 tornado touched down in
Monongalia County. Winds were estimated to be between 65 and 70 mph. [35]
June 24, 2019 – Two tornadoes touched down in
Kanawha County; an EF1 tornado touched down near
Alum Creek and traveled northeast dissipating near the
Kanawha River. Shortly after, a second tornado, this one an EF0; caused damage near
Yeager Airport. [36]
2020-present
May 3, 2021 – A short lived EF1 tornado touched down in the
Ranson community in
Jefferson County. Along Robelei Drive just west of
West Virginia Route 115/Mildred Street. One homeowner with a personal home anemometer measured an unofficial 68mph wind gust. In addition, one person was injured[37].
June 14, 2021 – A short lived EF0 tornado touched down in
Marion County near
Fairmont. Considerable tree damage was reported, especially along Stoney Road.
August 1, 2022 – A short lived EF2 tornado touched down along the
Marshall-
Ohio County line before crossing into
Pennsylvania and dissipating shortly thereafter [39][40].
April 2, 2024 – 10 tornadoes touched down throughout the state; making this the largest tornado outbreak in state history. The strongest tornado during this event was a high end EF2 in
Fayette County. Many of the tornadoes were as the result of a
derecho which moved through the state during the mid-morning hours. Aside from the tornadoes, there was also widespread straight line wind damage as well. No one died but two people were injured by the tornadoes. [42][43]
May 9, 2024 – An EF1 tornado struck rural areas of
Wood County which flipped a mobile home, causing minor injuries to one person. [44]
May 26, 2024 – A brief EF0 tornado was confirmed in the
Winfield area of
Putnam County as a large squall line moved through. [45][46]
The following is a chart showing West Virginia tornadoes by month or by time period. Although at the moment, it only includes 10 of the tornadoes that impacted in April of 2024; 2 in May 2024; and 3 in June. [48]
Recorded tornadoes affecting West Virginia by month
Month
Number of tornadoes
January
2
February
1
March
12
April
29
May
18
June
55
July
38
August
22
September
10
October
6
November
1
December
3
Recorded tornadoes affecting West Virginia by time period