Tornado outbreak sequence of June 14–19, 2023

Tornado outbreak sequence of June 14–19, 2023
Confirmed tornadoes and warnings from June 14–19, 2023
Meteorological history
DurationJune 14–19, 2023
Tornado outbreak
Tornadoes93
Maximum ratingEF3 tornado
Highest winds150 mph (240 km/h) (Louin, Mississippi EF3 on June 18)
Largest hail4.75 in (12.1 cm) near Caledonia, Mississippi on June 16
Overall effects
Fatalities4 (+1 non-tornadic)
Injuries~120
Damage$3.5 billion (2023 USD)
Power outages1,005,000

Part of the tornado outbreaks of 2023

A multi-day period of significant tornado and severe weather activity occurred across the Southern United States, Ohio Valley, and southern High Plains in mid-June 2023. Starting on June 14, tornadoes occurred in Texas, Alabama, and Georgia, where they caused large-scale damage to trees and structures. The tornado outbreak continued on June 15, where tornadoes occurred in five states, including one EF3 tornado which moved directly through the center of Perryton, Texas, causing major damage and three fatalities. More tornadoes touched down on June 16 in the southern and northeastern United States, including an unusual anticyclonic tornado in Mobile and Baldwin counties in Alabama, where the tornado itself was associated with the anticyclonic bookend vortex of a powerful mesoscale convective system. More tornadoes occurred on June 17 and 18, including another EF3 tornado near Louin, Mississippi that destroyed numerous homes and other buildings, killed one person, and injured twenty-five others. This outbreak sequence was unusual in the sense that it produced strong tornadoes in the Deep South in June, despite the region's peak tornado season being March through mid-May, along with the autumn months.