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Thailand·Natural disasters

Thailand natural hazards and disaster risk

Earthquakes, storms, volcanoes, floods, and wildfires. Combines the disaster sub-score with the active event feed from USGS, NOAA, NHC, JMA, GVP, and regional agencies. The Field Manual covers the response protocols.

Disaster sub-score
67Low risk · exercise caution
Overall Safe Trip Score 69

Recent signals

  • floodGDACS2w ago
    Green flood alert in Thailand
    On 13/05/2026, a flood started in Thailand, lasting until 31/05/2026 (last update). The flood caused 0 deaths and 3 displaced .
    Source →
    -3.0

Foreign-ministry advisories

Practical guidance

What the disaster sub-score covers

Thailand’s natural-disaster sub-score is 67/100 (moderate band). It combines the country’s long-term hazard exposure (fault lines, tropical cyclone tracks, volcanic chains, flood basins) with the live event feed from USGS, NOAA, NHC, JMA, GVP, and regional agencies. A score drop usually means a specific recent event; baseline hazard exposure barely moves year over year. The events feed above shows what is currently active.

Seasonality matters more than the headline number

Most natural-hazard risk is seasonal. Atlantic hurricane season runs June through November (peak August to October). Pacific typhoon season is broadly May to October. Indian Ocean monsoon flooding peaks June to September in South Asia. North Atlantic storm surge weights winter months. Volcanic and seismic risk is non-seasonal but clusters geographically; a country’s baseline score factors this in, but your specific itinerary’s exposure depends on which region you visit. The country safety guide’s natural- hazards chapter breaks it down by region.

What to actually do

Three concrete steps that move you out of the “tourist who got caught in it” bucket: enrol in your government’s traveller-notification programme (STEP for US citizens, LOCATE for UK, Smartraveller subscription for AU) so embassies can reach you in a major incident; download offline maps of your destination before you arrive (Maps.me or Google Maps offline) because mobile networks fail first in most disasters; and read the relevant Field Manual response guide for the specific hazard your destination carries. How to survive an earthquake while travelling and the wildfire, flood, and hurricane equivalents are linked from the relevant country safety guides.

Related for Thailand

Long-form context

Travelling safely in Thailand

Thailand is broadly safe for tourists but the pattern is unlike any of the other top-tier travel destinations. Violent crime is rare; what kills foreigners is motorbikes, water, drink-spiking, and a handful of well-documented scam ecosystems. The southernmost three provinces carry an active separatist insurgency and are the only do-not-travel zones in the country. This guide unpacks each, plus the lèse-majesté law, the medical-tourism infrastructure, the visa quirks for long stays, and the season-by-season weather story that shapes everything else.

16 min read →

Frequently asked about Thailand

What natural hazards affect Thailand?

Thailand's natural-disaster sub-score is 67/100. It combines long-term hazard exposure (fault lines, tropical cyclone tracks, volcanic chains, flood basins) with the live event feed from USGS, NOAA, NHC, JMA, GVP, and regional agencies. Currently active events are listed in the recent-signals feed above.

When is hurricane / typhoon season in Thailand?

Atlantic hurricane season runs June through November (peak August to October). Pacific typhoon season is broadly May to October. Indian Ocean cyclone season splits between November to April (southern hemisphere) and April to December (Bay of Bengal). Thailand's specific exposure window is documented in the country safety guide.

What should I do if a natural disaster happens while I am in Thailand?

Three concrete steps before you go: enrol in your government's traveller-notification programme (STEP for US, LOCATE for UK, Smartraveller subscription for AU), download offline maps because mobile networks fail first in major incidents, and read the relevant Field Manual response guide (earthquake, hurricane, wildfire, flood) for the specific hazard your destination carries.