According to
CSIRO and the
Bureau of Meteorology,
global warming has increased the chances of extreme rain and flash floods recently.[2][3] However, destructive heavy rainfall events have occurred in Australia, including the Sydney area, since records began in the 18th century.[4][5]
Annually, coastal Sydney sees five
heat-related deaths per 100,000 people while the western suburbs see 14 per 100,000.[6] Heat-related deaths in the city were common in the late 19th and early 20th century period where several individual cases were reported.[7][8][9][10]
Temperatures
On 10 January 1929, extreme heat kills thousands of
fowls on
poultry farms in the city as temperatures rose to 41.2 °C (106 °F).[12]
On 25 August 1954, Sydney recorded its warmest winter day as the temperature climbed from 13.8 °C (57 °F) at 5 am to 30.4 °C (87 °F) at 2:45 pm, where an 80 year old man died and twelve other people collapsed from
heatstroke.[13]
The highest recorded minimum in Sydney was registered at Masons Drive,
North Parramatta at 29.4 °C (84.9 °F) on 9 January 1983.[14]
On 15 November 2010, the temperature stayed at exactly 21.7 °C (71 °F) for the entire 24 hour duration of the day.[15]
On 23 August 2012, a
foehn effect caused Sydney to record its 3rd warmest August day on record where it reached 29.0 °C (84 °F) at the CBD and 30.0 °C (86 °F) at
Sydney Airport.[16]
July 2013 was the warmest on record, with an average maximum temperature of 19.5 °C (67.1 °F), which is 3.2 °C (5.8 °F) above the historical average. This was due to persistent, warm northerly winds and clear conditions.[18]
In September 2013, temperatures were 4 °C (7 °F) above average[19] and the city had over seven days where temperatures reached 28 °C (82 °F), making it more similar to November's weather pattern.[20]
October 2015 had the warmest nights on record, which were 3.3 °C (5.9 °F) above average.[21]
In the summer of 2016–17, Sydney CBD experienced a record-breaking of 26 days where temperatures were above 30 °C (86 °F) and 11 days of temperatures higher than 35 °C (95 °F), with record numbers of days above 40 °C (104 °F) recorded in western Sydney including 11 days at
Richmond, in addition to the most warm nights on record.[22]
On 7 January 2018, Sydney was the hottest place on Earth as Penrith reached 47.3 °C (117.1 °F).[23]
In April 2018, Sydney had the longest running hot spell for that month with nine consecutive days of temperatures reaching 25 °C (77 °F). Furthermore, the airport and parts of the western suburbs also broke heat records in that month.[24]
On New Years Eve 2019, Penrith recorded its hottest December day when the temperature peaked at 46.3°C (115°F).[25]
The highest recorded maximum temperature in Sydney was recorded at
Penrith with a high of 48.9 °C (120 °F) on 4 January 2020.[26] Moreover, a heat logger registered a temperature of 52.0 °C (125.6 °F) at
Berkshire Park, making it the hottest temperature ever recorded in the Sydney basin, albeit being an unofficial one.[27][28] Also on that day, Penrith again earned the title of the "hottest place on earth".[29][30]
From 28-29 November 2020, Sydney Airport recorded its hottest two days in a row. The 28th registered 43 °C (109 °F) whilst the 29th had registered 42.6 °C (108.7 °F).
During May 2021, Sydney CBD recorded its coldest stretch of May days in 54 years due to a polar blast that swept across Australia's southeast, which kept the temperatures below 9 °C (48 °F) in the early mornings for five consecutive nights, in addition to the inland suburbs dipping down to 1 °C (34 °F) in
Camden and 5 °C (41 °F) in
Sydney Olympic Park.[31]
On 10 June 2021, Sydney CBD had its coldest day since 1984 and the coldest June day since 1899, where it reached a maximum of just 10.3 °C (50.5 °F).
Bankstown, a western suburb, only reached 9.7 °C (49.5 °F), its coldest day in 50 years, with nearby suburbs registering a similar temperature.[32] These unusually cold maximums were caused by a
cut-off low, which is a slow moving, sizeable Antarctic cold air mass that got "cut-off" from the westerly trough systems of cold air in the south where it reached the east coast.[33]
August 2021 registered 15 consecutive winter days above 20 °C (68 °F), the first time in 163 years of records, which was achieved due to a lack of cold fronts or rain over NSW during the month and a
blocking high in Southern Australia that prevented cold fronts from reaching the continent.[34]
In September 2023,
Western Sydney had six days in a row where the temperature was higher than 32 °C (90 °F), beating the previous September record of five consecutive days.[35]
On 20 September 2023, Sydney Airport recorded its highest temperature that month at 35.9 °C (96.6 °F), where it just tipped the previous peak of 35.6 °C (96.1 °F) in 2000.[36]
On 1 October 2023, the city had the hottest start on record where temperatures were 14 °C (57 °F) above average in most suburbs.[37]
In December 2023, Sydney experienced the hottest first fortnight of summer on record where the average maximum temperature was 29.5 °C (85.1 °F), which beats the previous record of 28.9 °C (84.0 °F) from the first fortnight of summer in 1976.[38]
9 December 2023 was Sydney Airport's hottest December day ever recorded, where the temperature soared to 43.5 °C (110.3 °F).[39]
On 11 January 2024, Sydney recorded its muggiest day on record, where the
dew point reached 26.9 °C (80.4 °F), just beating the previous record of 25.9 °C (78.6 °F) on 14 November 2011.[40]
On 23 October 2002, drought and record maximum temperatures in eastern Australia produced a large dust storm – The storm arrived in Sydney at about 11am, reducing
visibility to a few kilometres. Previous dust storms in the city occurred in April 1994, September 1968, December 1957, and January 1942 – The most severe dust storm to hit Sydney, reducing visibility at Sydney Airport to 500 metres.[45]
On 23 September 2009, a
dust storm that started in
South Australia and inland
New South Wales blanketed the city with reddish orange skies early in the morning. Originating from the
north-eastern region of
South Australia, the dust storm lifted thousands of tons of dirt and soil which were then dumped in
Sydney Harbour and the
Tasman Sea.[46] It stretched as far north as southern
Queensland and it was the worst dust storm in 70 years.[47] During that year, Sydney experienced a number of warm winter days, dry gusty winds and another milder dust storm.[48][49]
February 2011 was the driest in 30 years with only 18 mm (0.71 in) of rain falling, which is well below the average of 118 mm (4.6 in). Some of the western suburbs recorded the lowest total February rainfall on record.[50]
The summer of 2013-14 was the driest since 1986–87, recording only 106.6 mm (4.20 in) of rain during the season, close to a third of the average of 297.7 mm (11.72 in).[52] Observatory Hill only received 17 mm (0.67 in) of rain in January.[53]
September 2017 was the driest on record, with the gauge receiving only 0.2 mm (0.0079 in) of rain. Furthermore, in that year, the city received less than half of its long-term average rainfall between July and December.[54]
In 22 November 2018, a
dust storm, stretching about 500 kilometres, swept through Sydney due to a low pressure trough and cold front that picked up dry soil in drought-ridden areas of
far western NSW that week. Milder compared to the 2009 storm, the effect of the dust was still apparent across iconic locations such as the
Sydney Opera House and Sydney Harbour Bridge.[55] 2018 in Sydney has been one of the driest in a century, with the Greater Western Sydney
farming region being the worst affected.[56]
Due to the widespread
bushfires in December 2019, which even affected the western periphery of the city, the Sydney metropolitan area suffered from dangerous smoky
haze for several days throughout the month, with the
air quality being 11 times the
hazardous level in some days,[57][58] even making it worse than
New Delhi's,[59] where it was also equalled to "smoking 32 cigarettes."[60]
December 2019 only recorded 1.6 mm (0.063 in) of rain at Observatory Hill, overthrowing the previous 2.8 mm (0.11 in) recorded for the month in 1979.[61]
June 2022 was the driest in 36 years, registering only 17.2 mm (0.68 in) of rain, despite the city having the wettest first half of a year on record.[62]
July 2023 recorded the driest start to winter in 85 years, receiving only 22.2 mm (0.87 in) of rain since the start of June. It was the driest start to winter since 1938 and the third-driest on record since records began in 1859.[63]
On 14 September 2023, Sydney was ranked third-worst in the world for air quality by
IQAir due to severe haze from
hazard reduction burns.[64]
On 19 December 2023, the city was blanketed by haze and experienced poor air quality due to gusty winds bringing smoke from
Pilliga forest bushfires.[65]
On 6 February 1788, Lieutenant
Ralph Clark, an officer of the
First Fleet, noted that he experienced "the most violent storm of lightning and rain", where he concludes, "The lightning was incessant during the whole night and I never heard it rain faster."[66]
The first recorded
tornado in Australia struck Sydney in 1795, during the early settlement, where it destroyed crops and trees.[67]
On 20 August 1857, the Dunbar, a sailing ship carrying 122 people from England, was wrecked off
South Head due to a powerful east coast low while trying to seek shelter in
Sydney Harbour, leaving only one survivor.[68]
Both in June 1816 and June 1864, the
Hawkesbury River had overflowed after heavy rainfall, rising over 14 meters, where it flooded and caused widespread damage in nearby towns.[69][70]
On 22 June 1867, heavy rain and winds caused the water of the Hawkesbury River to rise to 19.2 metres, submerging and ruining 16,000 homes and buildings from
Pitt Town to
Wisemans Ferry. The flood caused 12 deaths, which were dramatically represented in the Illustrated Sydney News in July 1867. Survivors were on rooftops waiting to be rescued by boatmen.[70] Known as The Great Flood, it caused damage in the order of $1.4 billion in the Nepean region and it has about a one-in-280 chance of occurring again.[71]
On 28 May 1889, the low-lying
Inner West suburbs of
Croydon Park,
Canterbury and
Marrickville were heavily affected by torrential rainfall. Residents were depicted in newspapers in their
rowboats rescuing the
homeless and rowing through the flooded streets besides partially sunken shopfronts and homes.[70][72] Some suburbs, such as
Prospect in the
greater west, received 314.2 mm (12.4 in) of rainfall in 24 hours.[73]
20th century
1910s–1930s
On 26 November 1912, a powerful hail and thunderstorm passed over Sydney, where 12.7 mm (0.50 in) of rain fell in 10 minutes flooding streets, in addition to a lightning killing one labourer at a tramway
construction site.[74]
On 24 March 1914,
Parramatta was flooded after 88.9 mm (3.50 in) of rain fell in just two hours.
Parramatta railway station, businesses in Church Street and houses were partially submerged, and the
Parramatta River was overflowed.[75]
On 25 November 1914, a severe thunderstorm which was likely accompanying a tornado, hit Sydney's northern and harbour-side suburbs, and destructed through a line of shopfronts near
Lindfield railway station.[76]
On 6 October 1916, an east coast low brought 120.1 mm (4.73 in) of rain in 24 hours, flooding roads, overflowing rivers and damaging vegetable gardens.[77]
On 25 October 1919, a powerful hailstorm caused severe damage to buildings when it blocked gutters and drains, thus allowing rainwater to overspill into ceilings and basements.[76]
On 6 July 1931, Sydney was whipped by cyclonic winds and heavy rainfall, where it received 198.1 mm (7.80 in) of rain in 24 hours. In addition to thousands of
pounds worth of damage to property, which included roofs and electricity, five deaths were recorded.[78]
On 25 January 1937, a tornado tore through the suburbs of Marrickville,
Mascot,
Botany and
Matraville, where five people died and dozens were injured in falling buildings.[76]
1940s–1960s
On 31 October 1940, a tornado created a 19 km (12 mi) path of damage, where it tore through thousands of homes, killing two people. A gust of 153 km/h was recorded.[76]
In the
1947 Sydney hailstorm, which occurred on 1 January 1947, a
storm cell developed on the morning of New Year's Day, over the
Blue Mountains, hitting the city and dissipating east of
Bondi in the mid-afternoon. At the time, it was the most severe storm to strike the city since recorded observations began in 1792. The high humidity, temperatures and weather patterns of Sydney increased the strength of the storm. The cost of damages from the storm were, at the time, approximately
GB£750,000 (
US$3 million); this is the equivalent of around
A$45 million in modern figures. The
supercell dropped hailstones larger than 8 centimetres (3.1 in) in diameter, with the most significant damage occurring in the
central business district and
eastern suburbs of Sydney.[79]
On 15 June 1949, 94.1 mm (3.70 in) of rain fell in just one hour, the highest at that time since the records began. Flash flooding swamped businesses, shopfronts and homes.[80]
In June 1950, a series of east coast cyclones develop off the New South Wales coast during which Sydney registered its highest monthly rainfall on record, 642.7 mm (25.3 in).[81][82]
On 26 July 1952, Sydney CBD received 203.2 mm (8.00 in) of rain and cyclonic winds caused local floods, two
landslides in the north, traffic delays and as well as a death of a man.[83]
On 10 February 1956, heavy rain caused the
Georges River to overflow, which led to five deaths, flooding 1,000 homes and leading to the evacuation of 8,000 people. Homes in
Bankstown,
Panania,
East Hills,
Milperra,
Moorebank and the surrounds were submerged. Stranded residents were rescued by the police, the army and by civilians in row boats.[76]
On 23 November 1961,
Penrith was flooded, with many properties and businesses being destroyed, after receiving half its annual average rainfall in just two days.[84] The Nepean River reached a height of 9.7 m (31.82 ft) after the area received 546 mm (21.5 in) of rain in two days.[85]
1970s–1990s
On 24 April 1974, the western suburbs endured severe flash flooding that resulted in $20 million worth of damage and one death, as a consequence of 200 mm (7.87 in) of rain falling in three days.[76]
On 10 March 1975,
Sydney airport received 174.7 mm (6.88 in) of rainfall in six hours, in addition to flash flooding which caused more than $15 m worth of damage.[76]
On 10 November 1976, intense thunderstorms caused severe damage in around
Lidcombe and Auburn, with tennis-ball size (6 cm) hail and violent winds that injured 10 people. Damage costs were $40 million.[76]
On 10–11 February 1978, a tornado tore through many homes in the
Lower North Shore, injuring eight people. The damage cost was $15 million.[76]
Between 19 and 24 March 1978, after an intense low pressure cell developed on the
Coral Sea, travelling southwards, heavy rainfall occurred in the east coast which overflowed the Hawkesbury River, thereby flooding nearby homes and damaging roads. Several weather stations in the Sydney metropolitan area reported daily rainfall totals in excess of 250 mm (9.84 in).[86]
On 8 November 1984, Sydney CBD saw 235 mm (9.25 in) of rain with 120.3 mm (4.74 in) falling at Observatory Hill in just one hour. Causing damage to homes in the
Sydney Harbour and burying vehicles in mud, the storm was caused by a coastal trough with very high humidity values which in turn spawned very slow moving
thunderstorms.[87] The cost of damages from the storm were, at the time, $80 million.[88]
On 6 August 1986, a record 327.6 mm (12.90 in) of rainfall was dumped on the city in 24 hours, causing severe floods, major traffic problems and damage in many parts of the metropolitan area.[89]
On 3 October 1986, ten people were injured and hundreds of homes were damaged after a hail up to 6 cm size hit the western suburbs. The total damage bill was $161 million.[87]
On 3 February 1990, Sydney CBD received its record 24 hour February rainfall at 243.6 mm (9.59 in), when
ex-tropical cyclone Nancy was centred on Brisbane.[90]
On 18 March 1990, in around
Auburn and Bankstown, large hail up to 8 cm diameter with strong winds and flash flooding caused $550 million worth of damage, where more than 2000 houses had window and roof damage.[91]
On 21 January 1991, the
Northern Sydney area (
Turramurra,
Pymble and the surrounds) received hail 7 cm in size with winds up to 230 km/h, and as well as 60 mm (2.36 in) of rain in 30 minutes. With a damage cost of $670 million, the storm event damaged over 7000 houses from felled trees and floods.[91]
On 12 February 1992, in the western and northern suburbs, a storm caused $335 million worth of damage after rain, large hail and flash flooding battered over 500 houses.[91]
On 20 November 1994, a severe storm caused $29 million worth of damage in the Sydney region, namely in the north, where many trees were felled and houses wrecked.[76]
In the early hours of 30 August 1996, an east coast low ravaged Sydney, bringing destructive winds that damaged properties and heavy rainfall that caused flash flooding and road blockage.
Turramurra received 160 mm (6.30 in) of rainfall in 24 hours,
Epping at 143 mm (5.63 in) and the CBD at 127 mm (5.00 in). Wind gusts up to 160 km/h were recorded. Insurance payouts due to the storm were estimated to be up to $50 million.[92][93]
On 7–8 August 1998, parts of Sydney and the
Illawarra region received in excess of 300 mm (12 in) of rain over four days.[68]
The
14 April 1999 hailstorm was a notable storm event in Sydney, which caused severe damage in many suburbs and killed one man when his boat was struck by lightning. The storm produced hailstones of up to 9 cm (3.5 in) in diameter and resulted in insurance losses of around
A$1.7 billion in less than five hours.[94]
21st century
2000s–2010s
On 3 December 2001, the state of New South Wales recorded a wind gust of 174 km/h during a freak thunderstorm in
Richmond. In addition, two schoolchildren were killed after a tree fell on their tent in the northern suburbs.[76]
On 8 January 2003, a powerful
southerly buster brought a maximum wind gust of 109 km/h, as well as a lightning storm with small hail that caused blackouts in over 70 suburbs.[76]
Between 1 and 2 February 2005, a powerful East Coast Low caused flash flooding in Sydney with reports of 6 cm size hail, in addition to roofs being blown off in
Gladesville.[76]
On 9 December 2007, a powerful thunderstorm affected western Sydney with hail 7 cm in diameter. The State Emergency Service received over 6000 calls for assistance and the damage bill was $201 million.[76]
In February 2010, Sydney received some of the highest rainfalls in 25 years with 65 mm (2.6 in) of rain falling in one night at Observatory Hill. In the first weeks of the month, some suburbs were hit by thunderstorms which brought heavy rain and gusty winds which cut out power and damaged homes.[97][98][99] The heavy rain was caused by remnants of ex-tropical
Cyclone Olga and humid north-easterly winds feeding into the
low pressure trough.[100][101]
In 2011, Sydney recorded its wettest July since 1950. The CBD recorded 244 mm (9.61 in) of rain that month. 2011 was also the wettest year since records began in 1858.[102]
On 18 November 2013, an
EF1 tornado hit
Hornsby, a suburb in the
Upper North Shore, where winds reached 140 kilometres per hour (87 mph).[103] The tornado's path was 2 km (1.2 mi) long and 50 m (160 ft) wide.[104][105] Blowing off roofs and toppling large trees, the tornado injured a total of 12 people.[103]
On 15 October 2014, a rainstorm described as a "once-in-a-decade event" hit the Sydney region. Parts of Sydney received the heaviest amount of rain in a span of hours in decades. 94 mm (3.70 in) of rain fell in
Strathfield in just over three hours. The winds were cyclonic in nature, with
Sydney Airport having over 107 km/h (66 mph) gusts, reaching
Category 1 strength. This event happened due to the formation of an
east coast low, which ignited several other
low pressure systems.[106]
On 20 April 2015, Sydney recorded 119.4 mm (4.70 in) of rainfall, the most in any day since February 2002. Winds were "cyclonic" in nature, reaching 135 km/h (84 mph). Killing three people, this east coast low was formed with "a really pronounced upper level trough of cold air that had moved in from
Victoria", Mr Sharpe said.[108] The maximum temperature was only 15.4 °C (60 °F), making it the coldest April day since 1983, according to BOM.[109]
On 16 December 2015, a tornado with a windspeed of 213 km/h tore along Sydney's southern coast, where it ripped off roofs, destroyed homes and overturned trucks.
Kurnell and
Bondi Junction were the most hard hit.[110]
On 5 June 2016, an east coast low brought heavy rainfall that passed the average total June rainfall of 132 mm (5.20 in). The deluge led to flash floods across the city and caused
coastal erosion, in addition to five deaths being reported.
Bankstown received its highest daily rainfall in 15 years, with 141 mm (5.55 in) of rain within the 24 hours. Meanwhile,
Pennant Hills,
Sydney Airport and
Prospect Reservoir experienced their wettest June day since 1991.[111]
On 28 November 2018, a number of suburbs in the Sydney CBD recorded over 100 mm (3.94 in) of rainfall in just two hours from thunderstorms that formed due to an intense low pressure system, which came from the west, in what's been the city's wettest November day since 1984.[112] The heavy deluge caused flash flooding, submerging cars in the suburb of
Redfern, alongside wind gusts that peaked over 90 km/h, which brought down trees and also contributed to the deaths of two people.[113] In
Mosman on the North Shore 111 mm (4.37 in) of rain fell by 9am, making it the wettest spot in Sydney that day.[114]
On 9 January 2019, Sydney was hit by a
lightning storm that was "one of the biggest in recent years", where several houses were struck.
Blacktown was the worst affected by the lightning storm, with over 20 homes reporting roof damage.[115]
On 8 February 2019, intense thunderstorms, lightning and heavy rain caused significant damage to buildings, severe road flooding, which left 45,000 homes across Sydney without power. About 50 mm (1.97 in) fell in some
inland suburbs in a span of just 30 minutes. Such heavy rainfall in a short period of time is expected once every ten years in the metropolitan area.[116]
2020s–present
Between 7 and 9 February 2020, the Sydney metropolitan area received its heaviest rain in 30 years. The storm brought vast flooding and strong winds that caused commuter chaos and left over 100,000 homes without power.[117] The city recorded around 391.6 mm (15.42 in) of rain within those three days, more than three times the average rainfall for February. Thousands of people living in depressed areas, such as those in
Narrabeen and southwest of Sydney near
Georges River, were told to evacuate due to billowing floodwaters and rising river levels. At least 200 people were rescued by
emergency services during the stormy weekend.
Warragamba Dam, which was only at 42% in capacity, reached as close to 70% after the deluge.[118][119] The last time more than 300 mm (11.81 in) of rain fell in two days in the city was in 1992, in addition to being the wettest four-day period since 1990.[120]
In the late evening of 18 February 2020, over 60,000 lightning strikes hit the Sydney area,[121] with wind gusts over 100 km/h (62 mph) being recorded in some Sydney suburbs. In addition to a man being killed by a flying
gas cylinder in
The Rocks, the storm toppled trees, damaged properties and left tens of thousands of homes without power.[122]
Between
17 and 23 March 2021, many parts of Sydney received heavy rainfall in a storm that was described as "dangerous and threatening" by the
Bureau of Meteorology, killing two people in the metropolitan area.[123][124] 330.5 mm (13.01 in) and 359.2 mm (14.14 in) of rain fell in Sydney CBD and Penrith, respectively, in a span of six days, which led to mass floods.[125] In
Chester Hill, a
tornado damaged homes and toppled trees, leaving thousands without electricity.[126] Parramatta received enough rain to flood the site of the new Parramatta Powerhouse and as well as the
Parramatta ferry wharf, which was overflowed after Parramatta River broke its
banks.[127] Moreover, the
Warragamba Dam began to spill, which was the first significant overflow of the reservoir since 1990.[128] Because of rising floodwaters,
Nepean River and
Hawkesbury River were overflowed, with areas in the suburbs nearby such as
Richmond,
Windsor and
Penrith being evacuated.[129] The BOM had confirmed that flooding from Hawkesbury River was higher than a similar major flooding event in November 1961.[130]
On 19 December 2021, a
storm with extreme winds of 130 km/h quickly swept across multiple suburbs in the
Northern Beaches area.[131][132] The storm caused a large amount of damage to property and powerlines, mostly due to trees toppling over from the wind, around 36,000 homes were left without power.[133] In
Narrabeen, three people were struck by a tree in a parking lot, causing the death of one woman and leaving two others critically injured.[134] Volunteers from
NSW SES worked alongside
Fire and Rescue New South Wales and
New South Wales Rural Fire Service to cleanup the damage left behind by the storm.[135]
On 22 February 2022, a month's worth of rain fell in less than a few hours in parts of the Sydney metropolitan area, which submerged streets and businesses, damaged road pavements and felled trees, in addition to flooding the Parramatta River and the nearby Powerhouse Museum site. Many suburbs recorded rainfall up to 100mm in the day, with 110mm falling in
Marrickville (98mm of it in just two hours).[136] The 30-hour rainy event made Sydney have its wettest summer in 30 years (or since 1991/92).[137]
On
3–8 March 2022, thousands of people in parts of western Sydney were told to evacuate as the
Hawkesbury River,
Nepean River and
Georges rivers began to rise after 174mm of rain fell over in
Warragamba in less than 24 hours on the 3rd. There was major flooding in North
Richmond and
Windsor as the rising river waters submerged many parts of these rural suburbs.[138] On the 8th, a heavy deluge inundated streets in parts of southwestern Sydney and far western Sydney, killing two people in a car. Areas near the Georges River and
Manly Dam were placed under an evacuation order by the
State Emergency Service as floodwaters began to rise that day.[139] On this day,
Mona Vale recorded 72 mm (2.83 in) in just two hours and
Mosman received 128 mm (5.04 in) in the six hours until the afternoon.[140] Sydney recorded its wettest March on record with the rain gauge picking up 554 mm (21.81 in) of rain, beating 521.4 mm (20.53 in) from 1942 – this also brought Sydney's annual total up to 1,076.2 mm (42.37 in), which is the highest January-to-March total in records that date back to 1859.[141]
On 6–7 April 2022, after two days of heavy rain, residents in
Woronora,
Camden,
Wallacia and
Chipping Norton were issued with a flood evacuation order as the
Woronora, Nepean and Georges Rivers began to rise. Streets in
Manly Vale and
Casula were heavily flooded, with roads to them being cut off. 107 mm (4.21 in) of rainfall was recorded in
Little Bay in just six hours, as well as 107 mm (4.21 in) at
Cronulla in just three hours overnight.[142] There were 25 flood rescues during the 24 hours of this event, with one death in
Cobbitty.[143]
Between
3–5 July 2022, an east coast low brought around eight months of rain in four days in Sydney's southwest, causing major flood and evacuation orders, in addition to one death.[144] Camden, in Sydney's southwest, had received 197.4 mm (7.77 in) of rain between 2 and 3 July, with Sydney CBD accumulating 148.6 mm (5.85 in) over the span of four days.[145] Sydney recorded its wettest July on record that year where 404 mm (15.91 in) of rain fell during the month, surpassing the July 1950 record.[146]
On 18 February 2023, a severe windstorm ripped through the city that left over 60,000 people without power. In addition to that, the heavy winds felled trees in the metropolitan area and caused chaos at a
sailing tournament where a boat's large sail was cast into the air, causing minor injuries among bystanders.[147]
On the night of 2 December 2023, a thunderstorm surged through the city that abruptly ended a
Good Things music event which featured US rock band
Fall Out Boy, where thousands of revelers there were told to evacuate. In addition, the storm also halted an
A-League soccer match between
Sydney FC and
Perth Glory.[148]
On 19 February 2024, around 75,000 lightning strikes were detected within 100km of the city. Of those lightning strikes, one struck and injured four people who were sheltering from the storm system in
Royal Botanic Gardens.[149]
Between 5 and 6 April 2024, a black nor'easter dumped heavy rain in the Sydney region, killing one man in western Sydney. The deluge caused major public transport delays and flooding in the
Northern Beaches.
Penrith recorded its heaviest 24-hour rainfall on record for April at 167 mm (6.57 in).[150]
According to
CSIRO and the
Bureau of Meteorology,
global warming has increased the chances of extreme rain and flash floods recently.[2][3] However, destructive heavy rainfall events have occurred in Australia, including the Sydney area, since records began in the 18th century.[4][5]
Annually, coastal Sydney sees five
heat-related deaths per 100,000 people while the western suburbs see 14 per 100,000.[6] Heat-related deaths in the city were common in the late 19th and early 20th century period where several individual cases were reported.[7][8][9][10]
Temperatures
On 10 January 1929, extreme heat kills thousands of
fowls on
poultry farms in the city as temperatures rose to 41.2 °C (106 °F).[12]
On 25 August 1954, Sydney recorded its warmest winter day as the temperature climbed from 13.8 °C (57 °F) at 5 am to 30.4 °C (87 °F) at 2:45 pm, where an 80 year old man died and twelve other people collapsed from
heatstroke.[13]
The highest recorded minimum in Sydney was registered at Masons Drive,
North Parramatta at 29.4 °C (84.9 °F) on 9 January 1983.[14]
On 15 November 2010, the temperature stayed at exactly 21.7 °C (71 °F) for the entire 24 hour duration of the day.[15]
On 23 August 2012, a
foehn effect caused Sydney to record its 3rd warmest August day on record where it reached 29.0 °C (84 °F) at the CBD and 30.0 °C (86 °F) at
Sydney Airport.[16]
July 2013 was the warmest on record, with an average maximum temperature of 19.5 °C (67.1 °F), which is 3.2 °C (5.8 °F) above the historical average. This was due to persistent, warm northerly winds and clear conditions.[18]
In September 2013, temperatures were 4 °C (7 °F) above average[19] and the city had over seven days where temperatures reached 28 °C (82 °F), making it more similar to November's weather pattern.[20]
October 2015 had the warmest nights on record, which were 3.3 °C (5.9 °F) above average.[21]
In the summer of 2016–17, Sydney CBD experienced a record-breaking of 26 days where temperatures were above 30 °C (86 °F) and 11 days of temperatures higher than 35 °C (95 °F), with record numbers of days above 40 °C (104 °F) recorded in western Sydney including 11 days at
Richmond, in addition to the most warm nights on record.[22]
On 7 January 2018, Sydney was the hottest place on Earth as Penrith reached 47.3 °C (117.1 °F).[23]
In April 2018, Sydney had the longest running hot spell for that month with nine consecutive days of temperatures reaching 25 °C (77 °F). Furthermore, the airport and parts of the western suburbs also broke heat records in that month.[24]
On New Years Eve 2019, Penrith recorded its hottest December day when the temperature peaked at 46.3°C (115°F).[25]
The highest recorded maximum temperature in Sydney was recorded at
Penrith with a high of 48.9 °C (120 °F) on 4 January 2020.[26] Moreover, a heat logger registered a temperature of 52.0 °C (125.6 °F) at
Berkshire Park, making it the hottest temperature ever recorded in the Sydney basin, albeit being an unofficial one.[27][28] Also on that day, Penrith again earned the title of the "hottest place on earth".[29][30]
From 28-29 November 2020, Sydney Airport recorded its hottest two days in a row. The 28th registered 43 °C (109 °F) whilst the 29th had registered 42.6 °C (108.7 °F).
During May 2021, Sydney CBD recorded its coldest stretch of May days in 54 years due to a polar blast that swept across Australia's southeast, which kept the temperatures below 9 °C (48 °F) in the early mornings for five consecutive nights, in addition to the inland suburbs dipping down to 1 °C (34 °F) in
Camden and 5 °C (41 °F) in
Sydney Olympic Park.[31]
On 10 June 2021, Sydney CBD had its coldest day since 1984 and the coldest June day since 1899, where it reached a maximum of just 10.3 °C (50.5 °F).
Bankstown, a western suburb, only reached 9.7 °C (49.5 °F), its coldest day in 50 years, with nearby suburbs registering a similar temperature.[32] These unusually cold maximums were caused by a
cut-off low, which is a slow moving, sizeable Antarctic cold air mass that got "cut-off" from the westerly trough systems of cold air in the south where it reached the east coast.[33]
August 2021 registered 15 consecutive winter days above 20 °C (68 °F), the first time in 163 years of records, which was achieved due to a lack of cold fronts or rain over NSW during the month and a
blocking high in Southern Australia that prevented cold fronts from reaching the continent.[34]
In September 2023,
Western Sydney had six days in a row where the temperature was higher than 32 °C (90 °F), beating the previous September record of five consecutive days.[35]
On 20 September 2023, Sydney Airport recorded its highest temperature that month at 35.9 °C (96.6 °F), where it just tipped the previous peak of 35.6 °C (96.1 °F) in 2000.[36]
On 1 October 2023, the city had the hottest start on record where temperatures were 14 °C (57 °F) above average in most suburbs.[37]
In December 2023, Sydney experienced the hottest first fortnight of summer on record where the average maximum temperature was 29.5 °C (85.1 °F), which beats the previous record of 28.9 °C (84.0 °F) from the first fortnight of summer in 1976.[38]
9 December 2023 was Sydney Airport's hottest December day ever recorded, where the temperature soared to 43.5 °C (110.3 °F).[39]
On 11 January 2024, Sydney recorded its muggiest day on record, where the
dew point reached 26.9 °C (80.4 °F), just beating the previous record of 25.9 °C (78.6 °F) on 14 November 2011.[40]
On 23 October 2002, drought and record maximum temperatures in eastern Australia produced a large dust storm – The storm arrived in Sydney at about 11am, reducing
visibility to a few kilometres. Previous dust storms in the city occurred in April 1994, September 1968, December 1957, and January 1942 – The most severe dust storm to hit Sydney, reducing visibility at Sydney Airport to 500 metres.[45]
On 23 September 2009, a
dust storm that started in
South Australia and inland
New South Wales blanketed the city with reddish orange skies early in the morning. Originating from the
north-eastern region of
South Australia, the dust storm lifted thousands of tons of dirt and soil which were then dumped in
Sydney Harbour and the
Tasman Sea.[46] It stretched as far north as southern
Queensland and it was the worst dust storm in 70 years.[47] During that year, Sydney experienced a number of warm winter days, dry gusty winds and another milder dust storm.[48][49]
February 2011 was the driest in 30 years with only 18 mm (0.71 in) of rain falling, which is well below the average of 118 mm (4.6 in). Some of the western suburbs recorded the lowest total February rainfall on record.[50]
The summer of 2013-14 was the driest since 1986–87, recording only 106.6 mm (4.20 in) of rain during the season, close to a third of the average of 297.7 mm (11.72 in).[52] Observatory Hill only received 17 mm (0.67 in) of rain in January.[53]
September 2017 was the driest on record, with the gauge receiving only 0.2 mm (0.0079 in) of rain. Furthermore, in that year, the city received less than half of its long-term average rainfall between July and December.[54]
In 22 November 2018, a
dust storm, stretching about 500 kilometres, swept through Sydney due to a low pressure trough and cold front that picked up dry soil in drought-ridden areas of
far western NSW that week. Milder compared to the 2009 storm, the effect of the dust was still apparent across iconic locations such as the
Sydney Opera House and Sydney Harbour Bridge.[55] 2018 in Sydney has been one of the driest in a century, with the Greater Western Sydney
farming region being the worst affected.[56]
Due to the widespread
bushfires in December 2019, which even affected the western periphery of the city, the Sydney metropolitan area suffered from dangerous smoky
haze for several days throughout the month, with the
air quality being 11 times the
hazardous level in some days,[57][58] even making it worse than
New Delhi's,[59] where it was also equalled to "smoking 32 cigarettes."[60]
December 2019 only recorded 1.6 mm (0.063 in) of rain at Observatory Hill, overthrowing the previous 2.8 mm (0.11 in) recorded for the month in 1979.[61]
June 2022 was the driest in 36 years, registering only 17.2 mm (0.68 in) of rain, despite the city having the wettest first half of a year on record.[62]
July 2023 recorded the driest start to winter in 85 years, receiving only 22.2 mm (0.87 in) of rain since the start of June. It was the driest start to winter since 1938 and the third-driest on record since records began in 1859.[63]
On 14 September 2023, Sydney was ranked third-worst in the world for air quality by
IQAir due to severe haze from
hazard reduction burns.[64]
On 19 December 2023, the city was blanketed by haze and experienced poor air quality due to gusty winds bringing smoke from
Pilliga forest bushfires.[65]
On 6 February 1788, Lieutenant
Ralph Clark, an officer of the
First Fleet, noted that he experienced "the most violent storm of lightning and rain", where he concludes, "The lightning was incessant during the whole night and I never heard it rain faster."[66]
The first recorded
tornado in Australia struck Sydney in 1795, during the early settlement, where it destroyed crops and trees.[67]
On 20 August 1857, the Dunbar, a sailing ship carrying 122 people from England, was wrecked off
South Head due to a powerful east coast low while trying to seek shelter in
Sydney Harbour, leaving only one survivor.[68]
Both in June 1816 and June 1864, the
Hawkesbury River had overflowed after heavy rainfall, rising over 14 meters, where it flooded and caused widespread damage in nearby towns.[69][70]
On 22 June 1867, heavy rain and winds caused the water of the Hawkesbury River to rise to 19.2 metres, submerging and ruining 16,000 homes and buildings from
Pitt Town to
Wisemans Ferry. The flood caused 12 deaths, which were dramatically represented in the Illustrated Sydney News in July 1867. Survivors were on rooftops waiting to be rescued by boatmen.[70] Known as The Great Flood, it caused damage in the order of $1.4 billion in the Nepean region and it has about a one-in-280 chance of occurring again.[71]
On 28 May 1889, the low-lying
Inner West suburbs of
Croydon Park,
Canterbury and
Marrickville were heavily affected by torrential rainfall. Residents were depicted in newspapers in their
rowboats rescuing the
homeless and rowing through the flooded streets besides partially sunken shopfronts and homes.[70][72] Some suburbs, such as
Prospect in the
greater west, received 314.2 mm (12.4 in) of rainfall in 24 hours.[73]
20th century
1910s–1930s
On 26 November 1912, a powerful hail and thunderstorm passed over Sydney, where 12.7 mm (0.50 in) of rain fell in 10 minutes flooding streets, in addition to a lightning killing one labourer at a tramway
construction site.[74]
On 24 March 1914,
Parramatta was flooded after 88.9 mm (3.50 in) of rain fell in just two hours.
Parramatta railway station, businesses in Church Street and houses were partially submerged, and the
Parramatta River was overflowed.[75]
On 25 November 1914, a severe thunderstorm which was likely accompanying a tornado, hit Sydney's northern and harbour-side suburbs, and destructed through a line of shopfronts near
Lindfield railway station.[76]
On 6 October 1916, an east coast low brought 120.1 mm (4.73 in) of rain in 24 hours, flooding roads, overflowing rivers and damaging vegetable gardens.[77]
On 25 October 1919, a powerful hailstorm caused severe damage to buildings when it blocked gutters and drains, thus allowing rainwater to overspill into ceilings and basements.[76]
On 6 July 1931, Sydney was whipped by cyclonic winds and heavy rainfall, where it received 198.1 mm (7.80 in) of rain in 24 hours. In addition to thousands of
pounds worth of damage to property, which included roofs and electricity, five deaths were recorded.[78]
On 25 January 1937, a tornado tore through the suburbs of Marrickville,
Mascot,
Botany and
Matraville, where five people died and dozens were injured in falling buildings.[76]
1940s–1960s
On 31 October 1940, a tornado created a 19 km (12 mi) path of damage, where it tore through thousands of homes, killing two people. A gust of 153 km/h was recorded.[76]
In the
1947 Sydney hailstorm, which occurred on 1 January 1947, a
storm cell developed on the morning of New Year's Day, over the
Blue Mountains, hitting the city and dissipating east of
Bondi in the mid-afternoon. At the time, it was the most severe storm to strike the city since recorded observations began in 1792. The high humidity, temperatures and weather patterns of Sydney increased the strength of the storm. The cost of damages from the storm were, at the time, approximately
GB£750,000 (
US$3 million); this is the equivalent of around
A$45 million in modern figures. The
supercell dropped hailstones larger than 8 centimetres (3.1 in) in diameter, with the most significant damage occurring in the
central business district and
eastern suburbs of Sydney.[79]
On 15 June 1949, 94.1 mm (3.70 in) of rain fell in just one hour, the highest at that time since the records began. Flash flooding swamped businesses, shopfronts and homes.[80]
In June 1950, a series of east coast cyclones develop off the New South Wales coast during which Sydney registered its highest monthly rainfall on record, 642.7 mm (25.3 in).[81][82]
On 26 July 1952, Sydney CBD received 203.2 mm (8.00 in) of rain and cyclonic winds caused local floods, two
landslides in the north, traffic delays and as well as a death of a man.[83]
On 10 February 1956, heavy rain caused the
Georges River to overflow, which led to five deaths, flooding 1,000 homes and leading to the evacuation of 8,000 people. Homes in
Bankstown,
Panania,
East Hills,
Milperra,
Moorebank and the surrounds were submerged. Stranded residents were rescued by the police, the army and by civilians in row boats.[76]
On 23 November 1961,
Penrith was flooded, with many properties and businesses being destroyed, after receiving half its annual average rainfall in just two days.[84] The Nepean River reached a height of 9.7 m (31.82 ft) after the area received 546 mm (21.5 in) of rain in two days.[85]
1970s–1990s
On 24 April 1974, the western suburbs endured severe flash flooding that resulted in $20 million worth of damage and one death, as a consequence of 200 mm (7.87 in) of rain falling in three days.[76]
On 10 March 1975,
Sydney airport received 174.7 mm (6.88 in) of rainfall in six hours, in addition to flash flooding which caused more than $15 m worth of damage.[76]
On 10 November 1976, intense thunderstorms caused severe damage in around
Lidcombe and Auburn, with tennis-ball size (6 cm) hail and violent winds that injured 10 people. Damage costs were $40 million.[76]
On 10–11 February 1978, a tornado tore through many homes in the
Lower North Shore, injuring eight people. The damage cost was $15 million.[76]
Between 19 and 24 March 1978, after an intense low pressure cell developed on the
Coral Sea, travelling southwards, heavy rainfall occurred in the east coast which overflowed the Hawkesbury River, thereby flooding nearby homes and damaging roads. Several weather stations in the Sydney metropolitan area reported daily rainfall totals in excess of 250 mm (9.84 in).[86]
On 8 November 1984, Sydney CBD saw 235 mm (9.25 in) of rain with 120.3 mm (4.74 in) falling at Observatory Hill in just one hour. Causing damage to homes in the
Sydney Harbour and burying vehicles in mud, the storm was caused by a coastal trough with very high humidity values which in turn spawned very slow moving
thunderstorms.[87] The cost of damages from the storm were, at the time, $80 million.[88]
On 6 August 1986, a record 327.6 mm (12.90 in) of rainfall was dumped on the city in 24 hours, causing severe floods, major traffic problems and damage in many parts of the metropolitan area.[89]
On 3 October 1986, ten people were injured and hundreds of homes were damaged after a hail up to 6 cm size hit the western suburbs. The total damage bill was $161 million.[87]
On 3 February 1990, Sydney CBD received its record 24 hour February rainfall at 243.6 mm (9.59 in), when
ex-tropical cyclone Nancy was centred on Brisbane.[90]
On 18 March 1990, in around
Auburn and Bankstown, large hail up to 8 cm diameter with strong winds and flash flooding caused $550 million worth of damage, where more than 2000 houses had window and roof damage.[91]
On 21 January 1991, the
Northern Sydney area (
Turramurra,
Pymble and the surrounds) received hail 7 cm in size with winds up to 230 km/h, and as well as 60 mm (2.36 in) of rain in 30 minutes. With a damage cost of $670 million, the storm event damaged over 7000 houses from felled trees and floods.[91]
On 12 February 1992, in the western and northern suburbs, a storm caused $335 million worth of damage after rain, large hail and flash flooding battered over 500 houses.[91]
On 20 November 1994, a severe storm caused $29 million worth of damage in the Sydney region, namely in the north, where many trees were felled and houses wrecked.[76]
In the early hours of 30 August 1996, an east coast low ravaged Sydney, bringing destructive winds that damaged properties and heavy rainfall that caused flash flooding and road blockage.
Turramurra received 160 mm (6.30 in) of rainfall in 24 hours,
Epping at 143 mm (5.63 in) and the CBD at 127 mm (5.00 in). Wind gusts up to 160 km/h were recorded. Insurance payouts due to the storm were estimated to be up to $50 million.[92][93]
On 7–8 August 1998, parts of Sydney and the
Illawarra region received in excess of 300 mm (12 in) of rain over four days.[68]
The
14 April 1999 hailstorm was a notable storm event in Sydney, which caused severe damage in many suburbs and killed one man when his boat was struck by lightning. The storm produced hailstones of up to 9 cm (3.5 in) in diameter and resulted in insurance losses of around
A$1.7 billion in less than five hours.[94]
21st century
2000s–2010s
On 3 December 2001, the state of New South Wales recorded a wind gust of 174 km/h during a freak thunderstorm in
Richmond. In addition, two schoolchildren were killed after a tree fell on their tent in the northern suburbs.[76]
On 8 January 2003, a powerful
southerly buster brought a maximum wind gust of 109 km/h, as well as a lightning storm with small hail that caused blackouts in over 70 suburbs.[76]
Between 1 and 2 February 2005, a powerful East Coast Low caused flash flooding in Sydney with reports of 6 cm size hail, in addition to roofs being blown off in
Gladesville.[76]
On 9 December 2007, a powerful thunderstorm affected western Sydney with hail 7 cm in diameter. The State Emergency Service received over 6000 calls for assistance and the damage bill was $201 million.[76]
In February 2010, Sydney received some of the highest rainfalls in 25 years with 65 mm (2.6 in) of rain falling in one night at Observatory Hill. In the first weeks of the month, some suburbs were hit by thunderstorms which brought heavy rain and gusty winds which cut out power and damaged homes.[97][98][99] The heavy rain was caused by remnants of ex-tropical
Cyclone Olga and humid north-easterly winds feeding into the
low pressure trough.[100][101]
In 2011, Sydney recorded its wettest July since 1950. The CBD recorded 244 mm (9.61 in) of rain that month. 2011 was also the wettest year since records began in 1858.[102]
On 18 November 2013, an
EF1 tornado hit
Hornsby, a suburb in the
Upper North Shore, where winds reached 140 kilometres per hour (87 mph).[103] The tornado's path was 2 km (1.2 mi) long and 50 m (160 ft) wide.[104][105] Blowing off roofs and toppling large trees, the tornado injured a total of 12 people.[103]
On 15 October 2014, a rainstorm described as a "once-in-a-decade event" hit the Sydney region. Parts of Sydney received the heaviest amount of rain in a span of hours in decades. 94 mm (3.70 in) of rain fell in
Strathfield in just over three hours. The winds were cyclonic in nature, with
Sydney Airport having over 107 km/h (66 mph) gusts, reaching
Category 1 strength. This event happened due to the formation of an
east coast low, which ignited several other
low pressure systems.[106]
On 20 April 2015, Sydney recorded 119.4 mm (4.70 in) of rainfall, the most in any day since February 2002. Winds were "cyclonic" in nature, reaching 135 km/h (84 mph). Killing three people, this east coast low was formed with "a really pronounced upper level trough of cold air that had moved in from
Victoria", Mr Sharpe said.[108] The maximum temperature was only 15.4 °C (60 °F), making it the coldest April day since 1983, according to BOM.[109]
On 16 December 2015, a tornado with a windspeed of 213 km/h tore along Sydney's southern coast, where it ripped off roofs, destroyed homes and overturned trucks.
Kurnell and
Bondi Junction were the most hard hit.[110]
On 5 June 2016, an east coast low brought heavy rainfall that passed the average total June rainfall of 132 mm (5.20 in). The deluge led to flash floods across the city and caused
coastal erosion, in addition to five deaths being reported.
Bankstown received its highest daily rainfall in 15 years, with 141 mm (5.55 in) of rain within the 24 hours. Meanwhile,
Pennant Hills,
Sydney Airport and
Prospect Reservoir experienced their wettest June day since 1991.[111]
On 28 November 2018, a number of suburbs in the Sydney CBD recorded over 100 mm (3.94 in) of rainfall in just two hours from thunderstorms that formed due to an intense low pressure system, which came from the west, in what's been the city's wettest November day since 1984.[112] The heavy deluge caused flash flooding, submerging cars in the suburb of
Redfern, alongside wind gusts that peaked over 90 km/h, which brought down trees and also contributed to the deaths of two people.[113] In
Mosman on the North Shore 111 mm (4.37 in) of rain fell by 9am, making it the wettest spot in Sydney that day.[114]
On 9 January 2019, Sydney was hit by a
lightning storm that was "one of the biggest in recent years", where several houses were struck.
Blacktown was the worst affected by the lightning storm, with over 20 homes reporting roof damage.[115]
On 8 February 2019, intense thunderstorms, lightning and heavy rain caused significant damage to buildings, severe road flooding, which left 45,000 homes across Sydney without power. About 50 mm (1.97 in) fell in some
inland suburbs in a span of just 30 minutes. Such heavy rainfall in a short period of time is expected once every ten years in the metropolitan area.[116]
2020s–present
Between 7 and 9 February 2020, the Sydney metropolitan area received its heaviest rain in 30 years. The storm brought vast flooding and strong winds that caused commuter chaos and left over 100,000 homes without power.[117] The city recorded around 391.6 mm (15.42 in) of rain within those three days, more than three times the average rainfall for February. Thousands of people living in depressed areas, such as those in
Narrabeen and southwest of Sydney near
Georges River, were told to evacuate due to billowing floodwaters and rising river levels. At least 200 people were rescued by
emergency services during the stormy weekend.
Warragamba Dam, which was only at 42% in capacity, reached as close to 70% after the deluge.[118][119] The last time more than 300 mm (11.81 in) of rain fell in two days in the city was in 1992, in addition to being the wettest four-day period since 1990.[120]
In the late evening of 18 February 2020, over 60,000 lightning strikes hit the Sydney area,[121] with wind gusts over 100 km/h (62 mph) being recorded in some Sydney suburbs. In addition to a man being killed by a flying
gas cylinder in
The Rocks, the storm toppled trees, damaged properties and left tens of thousands of homes without power.[122]
Between
17 and 23 March 2021, many parts of Sydney received heavy rainfall in a storm that was described as "dangerous and threatening" by the
Bureau of Meteorology, killing two people in the metropolitan area.[123][124] 330.5 mm (13.01 in) and 359.2 mm (14.14 in) of rain fell in Sydney CBD and Penrith, respectively, in a span of six days, which led to mass floods.[125] In
Chester Hill, a
tornado damaged homes and toppled trees, leaving thousands without electricity.[126] Parramatta received enough rain to flood the site of the new Parramatta Powerhouse and as well as the
Parramatta ferry wharf, which was overflowed after Parramatta River broke its
banks.[127] Moreover, the
Warragamba Dam began to spill, which was the first significant overflow of the reservoir since 1990.[128] Because of rising floodwaters,
Nepean River and
Hawkesbury River were overflowed, with areas in the suburbs nearby such as
Richmond,
Windsor and
Penrith being evacuated.[129] The BOM had confirmed that flooding from Hawkesbury River was higher than a similar major flooding event in November 1961.[130]
On 19 December 2021, a
storm with extreme winds of 130 km/h quickly swept across multiple suburbs in the
Northern Beaches area.[131][132] The storm caused a large amount of damage to property and powerlines, mostly due to trees toppling over from the wind, around 36,000 homes were left without power.[133] In
Narrabeen, three people were struck by a tree in a parking lot, causing the death of one woman and leaving two others critically injured.[134] Volunteers from
NSW SES worked alongside
Fire and Rescue New South Wales and
New South Wales Rural Fire Service to cleanup the damage left behind by the storm.[135]
On 22 February 2022, a month's worth of rain fell in less than a few hours in parts of the Sydney metropolitan area, which submerged streets and businesses, damaged road pavements and felled trees, in addition to flooding the Parramatta River and the nearby Powerhouse Museum site. Many suburbs recorded rainfall up to 100mm in the day, with 110mm falling in
Marrickville (98mm of it in just two hours).[136] The 30-hour rainy event made Sydney have its wettest summer in 30 years (or since 1991/92).[137]
On
3–8 March 2022, thousands of people in parts of western Sydney were told to evacuate as the
Hawkesbury River,
Nepean River and
Georges rivers began to rise after 174mm of rain fell over in
Warragamba in less than 24 hours on the 3rd. There was major flooding in North
Richmond and
Windsor as the rising river waters submerged many parts of these rural suburbs.[138] On the 8th, a heavy deluge inundated streets in parts of southwestern Sydney and far western Sydney, killing two people in a car. Areas near the Georges River and
Manly Dam were placed under an evacuation order by the
State Emergency Service as floodwaters began to rise that day.[139] On this day,
Mona Vale recorded 72 mm (2.83 in) in just two hours and
Mosman received 128 mm (5.04 in) in the six hours until the afternoon.[140] Sydney recorded its wettest March on record with the rain gauge picking up 554 mm (21.81 in) of rain, beating 521.4 mm (20.53 in) from 1942 – this also brought Sydney's annual total up to 1,076.2 mm (42.37 in), which is the highest January-to-March total in records that date back to 1859.[141]
On 6–7 April 2022, after two days of heavy rain, residents in
Woronora,
Camden,
Wallacia and
Chipping Norton were issued with a flood evacuation order as the
Woronora, Nepean and Georges Rivers began to rise. Streets in
Manly Vale and
Casula were heavily flooded, with roads to them being cut off. 107 mm (4.21 in) of rainfall was recorded in
Little Bay in just six hours, as well as 107 mm (4.21 in) at
Cronulla in just three hours overnight.[142] There were 25 flood rescues during the 24 hours of this event, with one death in
Cobbitty.[143]
Between
3–5 July 2022, an east coast low brought around eight months of rain in four days in Sydney's southwest, causing major flood and evacuation orders, in addition to one death.[144] Camden, in Sydney's southwest, had received 197.4 mm (7.77 in) of rain between 2 and 3 July, with Sydney CBD accumulating 148.6 mm (5.85 in) over the span of four days.[145] Sydney recorded its wettest July on record that year where 404 mm (15.91 in) of rain fell during the month, surpassing the July 1950 record.[146]
On 18 February 2023, a severe windstorm ripped through the city that left over 60,000 people without power. In addition to that, the heavy winds felled trees in the metropolitan area and caused chaos at a
sailing tournament where a boat's large sail was cast into the air, causing minor injuries among bystanders.[147]
On the night of 2 December 2023, a thunderstorm surged through the city that abruptly ended a
Good Things music event which featured US rock band
Fall Out Boy, where thousands of revelers there were told to evacuate. In addition, the storm also halted an
A-League soccer match between
Sydney FC and
Perth Glory.[148]
On 19 February 2024, around 75,000 lightning strikes were detected within 100km of the city. Of those lightning strikes, one struck and injured four people who were sheltering from the storm system in
Royal Botanic Gardens.[149]
Between 5 and 6 April 2024, a black nor'easter dumped heavy rain in the Sydney region, killing one man in western Sydney. The deluge caused major public transport delays and flooding in the
Northern Beaches.
Penrith recorded its heaviest 24-hour rainfall on record for April at 167 mm (6.57 in).[150]