Prosper in a dynamic world
Search

More thunderstorms in eastern NSW today

Parts of eastern NSW, including Sydney, will face another day of heavy showers and potentially thunderstorms today.

A broad upper-level low and numerous surface-based low pressure troughs are producing wet and stormy weather over NSW at the start of this week.

On Monday, heavy showers and severe thunderstorms soaked parts of eastern, central and northern NSW, triggering warnings for flash flooding in Sydney and other parts of the state.

Total Lightning Network detected 864,000 lightning strikes within a 500 km radius of Newcastle between 9am on Monday and 9am on Tuesday. These included strikes over Sydney, and as far north and south as the Vic and Qld borders.

Rainfall totals of around 40 to 80 mm were recorded in the last 24 hours from Sydney up to southeast Qld, with falls of 20 to 40 mm also seen in a few places on the western side of the ranges in northern NSW.

Sydney Airport’s 39 mm in the 24 hours to 9am on Tuesday was its heaviest rain in two months, while Kings Langley and Little Bay both saw more than 50 mm in this period.

While Monday was the peak of this storm outbreak for many areas of NSW, a coastal trough will continue to generate showers and thunderstorms in the state’s east on Tuesday. The most likely areas to see more storms on Tuesday are the central and northern coast and ranges. Some storms could also develop over the southern ranges in NSW and extend across the border into eastern Vic.

Image: Forecast accumulated rain on Tuesday, February 20, according to the ECMWF-HRES model.

Tuesday’s thunderstorms have an increased risk of heavy rain and flash flooding, due to their slow movement in weak steering winds. If severe storms do form, you can check the latest severe thunderstorm warnings for the most up-to-date information. For more information on our thunderstorm services, please contact us at apac.sales@dtn.com

Latest news

Satisfy your weather obsession with these news headlines from around the nation, and the world.

Rapid El Niño signal accelerating risk for Australian businesses

El Niño–favourable conditions are gathering pace across the tropical Pacific, with key ocean indicators approaching threshold levels and early atmospheric responses emerging.  While uncertainty remains around final El Niño strength, historical analogues show that even weak events can generate widespread impacts, including reduced rainfall, warmer daytime temperatures, increased frost risk, elevated fire danger, reduced tropical cyclone activity, and more. Industries including […]

Australia’s 2025–26 Cyclone Season: Slightly Above Average, Dominated by Severe Systems

Australia has just experienced a highly impactful tropical cyclone season, with more than 60% of systems reaching severe intensity, causing widespread disruption and damage to communities and multiple industries across northern Australia.  The 2025–26 Australian tropical cyclone season officially ran from 1 November 2025 to 30 April 2026. During this six-month period, Australia saw 11 tropical cyclones, with nine […]

What does a ‘super El Niño’ mean for Australia’s businesses?

There are signs that a very strong, or ‘super’ El Niño could develop in the tropical Pacific Ocean later this year. So, what does this mean for Australia’s weather during the second half of 2026? El Niño on the horizon The tropical Pacific Ocean is currently in a neutral state, meaning neither El Niño nor […]

How does DTN help businesses monitor bushfire induced pyrocumulonimbus thunderstorms that ignite more fires?

Intense heat from bushfires during elevated fire danger days can trigger fire-induced pyrocumulonimbus thunderstorms that ignite additional fires. In early January 2026, an extreme heatwave sweeping over southeastern Australia brought catastrophic fire danger to Victoria. Intensely hot bush and grass fires spread erratically and quickly in hot, dry and gusty winds, with pyrocumulonimbus generating lightning, […]