Georgia has recorded 1,929 tornadoes between 1950 and 2024 in NOAA’s Storm Prediction Center database, with 237 fatalities and 4,162 injuries across that span. The strongest tornadoes recorded in Georgia reached EF4, with 84 tornadoes rated EF3 or stronger. Use the interactive map below to explore every recorded Georgia tornado track by year, click any path for date and damage details, and switch to the all-years view to see the full historical footprint.
Georgia Tornado Activity at a Glance
- Total tornadoes (1950–2024): 1,929
- Total fatalities: 237
- Total injuries: 4,162
- Strongest rating recorded: EF4 / F4
- EF3+ significant tornadoes: 84
- Longest tornado track: 217.8 mi
- Widest tornado path: 2,613 yd (1.48 mi)
- Most active month: April (424 tornadoes, 22% of total)
- Busiest year: 2017 (117 tornadoes)
- Deadliest year: 2011 (26 fatalities)
- Most active decade: 2000s (365 tornadoes)
EF / F Scale Rating Distribution
How Georgia tornadoes break down by intensity rating. Most tornadoes nationwide rate EF0 or EF1; the rare EF3+ events account for the bulk of fatalities and damage.
| EF / F Rating | Count | Share |
|---|---|---|
| Unrated | 5 | 0.3% |
| EF0 / F0 | 600 | 31.1% |
| EF1 / F1 | 909 | 47.1% |
| EF2 / F2 | 331 | 17.2% |
| EF3 / F3 | 73 | 3.8% |
| EF4 / F4 | 11 | 0.6% |
Georgia Tornadoes by Decade
Decade-by-decade tornado counts in Georgia. Apparent increases over time partly reflect improved detection (especially after Doppler radar deployment in the 1990s) rather than purely natural change in tornado frequency.
| Decade | Tornadoes |
|---|---|
| 1950s | 124 |
| 1960s | 187 |
| 1970s | 259 |
| 1980s | 180 |
| 1990s | 236 |
| 2000s | 365 |
| 2010s | 343 |
| 2020s | 235 |
When Georgia Tornadoes Strike
Tornado counts by calendar month. Georgia’s peak season runs through April (which alone accounts for 22% of all recorded tornadoes), driven by the seasonal collision of warm Gulf moisture and cooler continental air masses.
| Month | Tornadoes | Share |
|---|---|---|
| January | 199 | 10.3% |
| February | 142 | 7.4% |
| March | 264 | 13.7% |
| April | 424 | 22% |
| May | 224 | 11.6% |
| June | 119 | 6.2% |
| July | 77 | 4% |
| August | 81 | 4.2% |
| September | 85 | 4.4% |
| October | 61 | 3.2% |
| November | 119 | 6.2% |
| December | 134 | 6.9% |
Deadliest Georgia Tornadoes Since 1950
The most fatal Georgia tornadoes recorded by NOAA, ranked by deaths. Click any track on the interactive map above to see this same data for any tornado.
| Date | Rating | Fatalities | Injuries | Path Length | Path Width |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2011-04-27 | EF4 / F4 | 20 | 335 | 48 mi | 800 yd |
| 1953-04-30 | EF4 / F4 | 18 | 300 | 1 mi | 333 yd |
| 1998-03-20 | EF3 / F3 | 12 | 171 | 4 mi | 100 yd |
| 2000-02-13 | EF3 / F3 | 11 | 175 | 9.2 mi | 300 yd |
| 2017-01-22 | EF3 / F3 | 11 | 45 | 24.7 mi | 700 yd |
| 1994-03-27 | EF3 / F3 | 9 | 70 | 40 mi | 2,613 yd |
| 1974-04-03 | EF4 / F4 | 9 | 67 | 29.5 mi | 200 yd |
| 2020-04-12 | EF2 / F2 | 8 | 24 | 8.9 mi | 860 yd |
| 2000-02-13 | EF3 / F3 | 7 | 15 | 15 mi | 300 yd |
| 2003-03-20 | EF3 / F3 | 6 | 200 | 25 mi | 600 yd |
Longest Georgia Tornado Tracks on Record
The longest continuous tornado paths recorded in Georgia since 1950, by miles traveled along the ground from touchdown to liftoff.
| Date | Path Length | Rating | Fatalities | Injuries |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1969-04-18 | 217.8 mi | EF2 / F2 | 0 | 30 |
| 2023-01-12 | 125.8 mi | EF2 / F2 | 4 | 40 |
| 1974-04-08 | 92.6 mi | EF1 / F1 | 1 | 7 |
| 1964-12-24 | 75.4 mi | EF3 / F3 | 0 | 1 |
| 1957-04-05 | 75 mi | EF2 / F2 | 2 | 5 |
Widest Georgia Tornado Paths on Record
The widest tornado damage paths recorded in Georgia, measured in yards across at the point of greatest width. The widest US tornado on record (the 2013 El Reno, Oklahoma EF3) reached 4,576 yards.
| Date | Path Width | Rating | Path Length | Fatalities |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1994-03-27 | 2,613 yd (1.48 mi) | EF3 / F3 | 44 mi | 3 |
| 1994-03-27 | 2,613 yd (1.48 mi) | EF3 / F3 | 40 mi | 9 |
| 2017-01-22 | 2,200 yd (1.25 mi) | EF3 / F3 | 70.4 mi | 5 |
| 2023-01-12 | 2,200 yd (1.25 mi) | EF3 / F3 | 31.2 mi | 0 |
| 2017-01-22 | 1,900 yd (1.08 mi) | EF1 / F1 | 11.1 mi | 0 |
How to Read the Georgia Tornado Map
- Year filter: The map opens with all Georgia tornado tracks from 1950 to 2024 loaded. Use the Year dropdown to focus on a single season — useful for revisiting a notable outbreak.
- Track color: Lines are colored by EF / F rating. Stronger tornadoes use warmer colors and thicker lines. The legend in the bottom-right of the map shows the full key.
- Track popups: Click any track to see the date, rating, path length in miles, path width in yards, and the fatality and injury totals from NOAA’s damage survey.
- Reset view: If you pan or zoom away, click the Reset to Georgia button in the controls bar to refit the map to the state.
Georgia Tornado FAQ
When is tornado season in Georgia?
Based on 1950–2024 records, the three most active months for Georgia tornadoes are April, March, May. April alone accounts for 22% of all recorded Georgia tornadoes. Activity outside this window is possible but uncommon.
How does Georgia rank for tornado activity?
Georgia recorded 1,929 tornadoes from 1950 through 2024 in NOAA’s database. Texas, Kansas, Oklahoma, Florida, and Nebraska are typically the top five states by total tornado count, while Alabama, Mississippi, and Tennessee record higher per-tornado fatality rates due to nighttime tornadoes and population exposure.
What is the difference between EF and F ratings?
The original Fujita Scale (F0–F5) was used from the 1970s through January 2007 and rated tornadoes on observed damage. The Enhanced Fujita Scale (EF0–EF5) replaced it in February 2007 with refined damage indicators that more accurately link wind speeds to structural failure modes. Both rating systems share the same ordinal levels, which is why you see them paired in the map legend and tables.
Why do older tornadoes show fewer details?
NOAA records improve substantially after the 1990s, when Doppler radar coverage expanded and damage-survey methodology was standardized. Before then, weak tornadoes in rural parts of Georgia often went undetected, ratings were assigned retroactively from limited damage reports, and path widths and lengths were estimated rather than surveyed in detail. The dataset is most reliable for the strong tornadoes that caused damage worth investigating.
Related Resources
- Georgia Severe Storm Reports — same NOAA database viewed as point events: tornado, hail, and damaging wind reports across Georgia.
- US Tornado Tracks Map — the full national map for cross-state and outbreak comparisons.
- NOAA Storm Reports Interactive Map — every reported tornado, hail, and wind event nationwide.
Data Source
All counts and event details are pulled live from NOAA’s Storm Prediction Center tornado database, published by NOAA and Esri as a public ArcGIS Feature Service. The database covers all known US tornadoes from 1950 through December 30, 2024, and is updated annually after post-season verification by the National Weather Service.




























