2025 Somerset–London tornado
In the late evening hours of May 16, 2025, a large and deadly nocturnal EF4 tornado moved through the Kentucky cities of Somerset and London. The tornado, which was on the ground for almost an hour and a half, killed 19 people and injured 108 others along a track. The tornado produced damage that was rated EF4 by the National Weather Service in Jackson, Kentucky. This violent tornado occurred as part of a major tornado outbreak that spanned from May 15 to 16.
The supercell that produced this tornado initiated over away in the south-central Missouri Ozarks region. The supercell produced few tornadoes along its track through Missouri, Illinois, and Kentucky, including a small but intense EF3 tornado that brought destructive impacts to the area south of the village of Blodgett, several homes suffered major damage, mobile homes were destroyed, trees were snapped. Two fatalities occurred and ten others were injured. Afterwards, the supercell crossed the Ohio River into Kentucky. The supercell produced a brief EF1 tornado near Lamasco and an EF2 tornado near Allegre, damaging or destroying several mobile homes and outbuildings. After the London tornado dissipated, the supercell eventually got absorbed into the mesoscale convective system.
The tornado first touched down in central Russell County, initially causing minor damage to trees and infrastructure before quickly intensifying to EF3 strength, inflicting major damage to a home near Whittle. The tornado weakened and shrunk after crossing into Pulaski County. After crossing Lake Cumberland, the tornado struck the southern side of Somerset at low-end EF3 intensity, inflicting severe to major damage to several homes and businesses. After leaving the city, the tornado tore through parts of the Daniel Boone National Forest at mid-range EF3 to low-end EF4 intensity, shredding and snapping several trees and destroying a couple of homes as the tornado entered Laurel County. The tornado then impacted the southern side of London at low-end EF4 intensity, inflicting catastrophic destruction to several homes, neighborhoods, and industrial buildings, resulting in several fatalities. The tornado dissipated shortly after near the community of Lida. The tornado was on the ground for 90 minutes and tracked for.
Recovery efforts immediately following the tornado were intensive, with several aid organizations, including The Salvation Army and the Federal Emergency Management Agency, traveling to London with relief supplies. Following the tornado, media outlets claimed National Weather Service office in Jackson, Kentucky was understaffed due to the staffing cuts made by Department of Government Efficiency, although the office was fully staffed at the same time of the tornado.
Meteorological synopsis
On May 12, the Storm Prediction Center outlined a Day 5 risk for middle Mississippi River valley. A pacific front associated with May 15 convection was expected to stall across the middle Mississippi and lower Ohio Valleys before moving north as a potent warm front. Ensemble Guidance models at the time were hinting at dewpoints reaching between mid to upper 60s, possibly reaching into low 70s, with the likelihood of one or more linear segments to traverse across the mid-Mississippi, lower Ohio, to potentially into Tennessee valleys. On May 14 at 0730 UTC, The Storm Prediction Center outlined a slight risk over much of the Ozark Plateau, Mississippi and Ohio River Valleys, with possibility of seeing scattered discrete supercells, organized clusters, including the chance of a long-lived mesoscale convective system. Medium and long-range guidance model suggest the development of thunderstorms along the warm front, with a surface trough ahead of the mid-level wave will mature. The models depicted an environment where the mean level convective available potential energy values were around 3000 J/kg and effective bulk shear of 40-50kn, developing a potent environment, with thermodynamic/kinematic conditions supporting development of long-lived severe weather. Despite this, there were still uncertainties around the event, with persistent disagreement among models still evident in regards to the northward extent of the warm sector, with some recent model runs showing the likelihood of persistent morning convection, and other model runs showing less morning convection. In the evening hours on the same day at 1730 UTC, an enhanced risk was outlined for most of lower Ohio Valley, with one or more organized cluster and couple more discrete supercells. An upper-level trough over the southern High Plains will traverse quickly across the Midwest, strong mid to upper southwesterly flow will overspread the region, the 500 mb jet stream was forecasted to be around 70-90kn. A highly moist airmass was forecasted to be in place extending from southern Missouri into southern Illinois and into northeast Ohio. Increased southerly flow ahead of the cold-front allows the warm-front along the I-70 corridor to lift north throughout the afternoon. Strong destabilization was forecasted to occur as a result of steep mid-level from cooling aloft and dewpoints of mid to upper 60s. Low-level jet around 45-60kn was forecasted to overspread the region due to peak daylight heating into the evening.The Storm Prediction Center outlined a moderate risk over much of the middle Mississippi and lower Ohio Valleys on May 16, with the greatest risk over southeastern Missouri, far northeastern Arkansas, northwestern Tennessee, southern Illinois and Indiana, far southwestern Ohio, and much of Kentucky. The upper-level low centered over the border of North Dakota and Minnesota was expected to move eastward into the middle Mississippi Valley. Following persisting convection from the previous day, a warm front swept over a large region from Missouri to the Ohio and Tennessee Valley regions. Over this region, the atmosphere was expected to sharply destabilize, with mean level convective available potential energy values exceeding 2500 J/kg, strong mid-level flow, and deep-layer wind shear exceeding expected to help develop and intensify severe weather and associated supercells. The 06z outlook issued by Chris Broyles and Harry Weinman mentioned the risk of "a high-end long-track tornado...from far southeast Missouri...into western Kentucky".
Tornado summary
Eastern Russell County to Somerset
The tornado first touched down in Russell County northeast of Jamestown at 10:26 p.m.EDT. At the touchdown point, the tornado damaged the roof of an outbuilding as it started eastward and crossed KY 619. The tornado then shattered windows and inflicted roof and siding damage to a home before crossing Caney Creek, uprooting trees on the hillsides on both sides of the creek. The tornado then turned east-northeastward, rolling and destroying a mobile home before crossing McFarland Creek and moving into Whittle and crossing KY 1611. The tornado partially removed the roof off a home and an outbuilding as it moved east-northeastward and crossed KY 76 before rapidly intensifying to high-end EF2 intensity, significantly debarking and stubbing hardwood trees, and destroying mobile homes and a camper. The tornado then crossed Alligator Creek and continued east-northeastward at low-end EF2 strength, snapping and uprooting trees, and destroying a garage. It then briefly strengthened to low-end EF3 intensity as it crossed Gosser Ridge Road, unroofing and destroying most of the exterior walls of a one-story brick home, with another home sustaining major EF1 roof damage. Several trees nearby were snapped.The small tornado maintained low-end EF3 intensity as it crossed into Pulaski County and continued eastward across House Fork Creek and Wolf Creek, stubbing and debarking hardwood trees. The tornado then weakened slightly and struck a farmstead on a Cundiff Road at high-end EF2 strength, unroofing a home and destroying several outbuildings as well as a small and large solo. The tornado then briefly reached low-end EF3 intensity on Cooks Chapel Road, unroofing and knocking down the exterior walls of a home and stubbing more trees. It then weakened significantly to low-end EF2 intensity as it crossed KY 196, unroofing another home, heavily damaging or destroying multiple outbuildings, and snapping trees. The tornado then narrowed and weakened further to EF1 intensity as it continued eastward and passed south of Faubush, damaging outbuildings and snapping trees along KY 1664. One small area of EF2 damage occurred on Oakes Road with a suffering considerable roof and exterior damage. The tornado then continued eastward at EF1 intensity as it passed south of Nancy and crossed KY 761 and KY 235 while gradually shrinking in size. Homes suffered roof damage, outbuildings were destroyed, and more trees were snapped. The tornado then crossed Clifty Creek and struck a neighborhood south of KY 80, causing heavy EF1-EF2 roof damage to homes and snapping trees and power poles. The tornado then narrowed even further and crossed Fishing Creek at EF1 strength before descending a steep hillside across KY 1577. After crossing KY 914 and entering the southern side of Somerset, the tornado strengthened and reached EF2 intensity as it continued down the hillside. Two homes were destroyed, other homes and apartment building suffered heavy roof and exterior wall damage, vehicles were damaged, and trees were snapped or uprooted. The tornado then impacted the Somerset Cinemas 8 building, about 100 people were inside watching movies at the time the building was struck. The building received minor roof and structural damage. A strip mall along Parkers Mill Way received major damage to its roof at mid-range EF2 strength.
The southside wall of the Pulaski County Area Technology Center sustained complete collapse. Along US 27/KY 1642, the tornado intensified to high-end EF2 intensity. The Redeemer Lutheran Church of Somerset received heavy damage, with the front and back walls of the church collapsing, major roof damage was also noted to occur. Multiple trees and power poles around the church were snapped or twisted. Adjacent to the church, the Baxter's Coffee restaurant also sustained major damage, with the roof being torn away and two walls collapsing. The Speedway and South Central Bank received significant roof and structural damage, with metal and electric power poles around the area snapped. The Hardee's restaurant had all their windows blown out and the sign broken and bent. Afterwards, the tornado sustained high-end EF2 intensity as it crossed Southern School Road. The Independent Opportunities Community Hab was completely flattened, with other nearby metal buildings sustaining significant damage.
Along Regency Drive and Weddle Lane, the tornado intensified to low-end EF3 strength, removing most of the roof and second story of the recently built Warrior Martial Arts building. At the South Kentucky Rural Electric Cooperative Corporation facility, the tornado inflicted major damage to the main office building and unroofed and collapsed most of the warehouse next to the building. From there, the tornado continued eastward at EF2 intensity, damaging a metal building system, destroying a small shed, and snapping more trees and power poles. More trees were snapped or uprooted at a farm where a small barn was shifted off its foundation, a silo was destroyed, metal roofing was removed from a building and several vehicles were damaged. In all, around a dozen homes and 20 businesses were destroyed in the Somerset area.
The tornado then crossed KY 914 again, snapping and uprooting swaths of trees as it exited Somerset. After crossing Pitman Creek, the tornado demolished an outbuilding along Doc Newell Road before crossing the Cincinnati Southern Railway and impacting a home along KY 2747 at low-end EF3 intensity. A poorly built home was blown off its foundation. The tornado maintained low-end EF3 intensity after crossing KY 1247 and impacted a small neighborhood along Curtis Ray Road. Several homes were substantially damaged, with the homes closest to the tornado's path being partially leveled. Several trees were snapped or uprooted, an outbuilding was destroyed, and cars and trailers at a junk yard were moved or flipped over. Along Elihu Cabin Hollow Road, a recently built barndominiam/metal framed house was completely swept away at mid-range EF2 intensity, with most of the debris being unable to be located, a shed on this property was also thrown clockwise to the other side of the home.
Downstream from the home, another group of homes were impacted at high-end EF2 intensity. A top part of a home was torn away, leaving the subfloor left, a small outbuilding nearby was destroyed. Multiple trees were downed and uprooted around the property. Southwest of the community of Alcalde, the tornado intensified to low-end EF3 strength. Along KY 769, a large transmission tower was crumpled and thrown. Several softwood trees were severely debarked, a home was unroofed and its side exterior walls collapsed, two barns were wiped clean off their foundation, and several trees were substantially snapped and uprooted. The tornado continued to produce heavy EF2 tree damage as it moved eastward. It also knocked over an RV and collapsed a metal barn on KY 1643.
Daniel Boone National Forest
The tornado then moved into the Daniel Boone National Forest and quickly intensified to EF3 strength, splintering and debarking swaths of trees as it grew in size. North of the community of Poplarville along KY 3269, the tornado intensified to low-end EF4 intensity for the first time. A one-story concrete foundation home was leveled. Three people were taking shelter, an elderly couple and a friend. Two survived, but the wife, a 69-year-old woman, was killed by flying debris and was later found in the yard of the home. Several nearby outbuildings on the property were obliterated and swept away, a car was heavily damaged, and several trees behind the property were extensively debarked and stubbed.The tornado then weakened as it continued eastward and crossed KY 192 at EF2 intensity. Another area of intense tree damage occurred east of KY 192, with the tornado regaining EF3 intensity. This included extreme tree damage with only stubs and heavily debarked softwood trees left behind. Surveyors assessed the wind speeds to be at, which is the highest wind speed rating for damage to softwood trees, but noted that the tornado was likely at EF4 intensity here. After briefly weakening to EF2 intensity, the tornado regained EF3 intensity as it approached KY 1003 while continuing to grow in size. Entire swaths of softwood trees were mowed down, debarked, and stubbed with surveyors again noting that the tornado may have reached EF4 intensity multiple times along this segment of the path. The tornado reached its maximum width of just under a mile as it crossed KY 1003, where several homes were heavily damaged or destroyed, including some that had some or all of their exterior walls knocked down, two mobile homes and outbuildings were blown away, vehicles were damaged, and power poles were damaged.
The tornado then crossed into Laurel County, continuing to mow down swaths of trees. After crossing the county line, it began to shrink in size and weaken slowly as it continued eastward, dropping to EF2 intensity along W Line Creek Road. The tornado then began impacting large residential areas southwest of London, first impacting the Laurel Canyon subdivision at high-end EF2 intensity. Multiple homes had their roofs completely removed and exterior walls knocked down, while other homes suffered minor to moderate roof damage. Wooden power poles were snapped, and several trees and power poles were snapped or uprooted as well. The tornado then shrank some more and weakened further to EF1 intensity, damaging or destroying outbuildings and snapping or uprooting trees. It then exited the forest and crossed KY 192 again, removing most of the roof off a home.
Aftermath
Casualties
Eighteen people were reported as killed as a direct result of the tornado. Of the eighteen killed, seventeen of the deaths occurred in London. One death occurred in the rural Pulaski County, and one person was killed indirectly in Russell County from carbon monoxide poisoning as a result of a generator being used after a power outage. The tornado was the deadliest in Eastern Kentucky on record. At least one of the deaths occurred in the Sunshine Hills subdivision, where a family with an unspecified number of members was killed. A grove of trees saved the lives of a family in the same subdivision; survey teams noted that "the only thing that likely saved this house and its occupants was the grove of trees located behind it, on the southwest side, which took the brunt of most of the debris coming from the houses upstream, while also delimbing and debarking the trees in the process". A couple, a major firefighter from the Laurel County Fire Department and his wife, were thrown into a field after the tornado destroyed their home; the firefighter was killed and his wife was left in critical condition.One person in a home on the subdivision had to receive an amputation as a result of damage from the tornado, which was rated EF4 at his property. Another couple each lost an arm as they were sheltering next to each other during the tornado. A family that was sheltering in their home was thrown as their residence was swept away, but the family survived with minor injuries. News agency Fox Weather wrote that the subdivision itself looked "unrecognizable". The New York Times said that the tornado was "out of a horror movie".
Local authorities in Somerset feared that the death toll would've been high in the city if the tornado had veered into more populated subdivisions along Parker Mills Road or had touched down during daylight, where the business district would have been very active with employees and customers. In the wake of the tornado, the Saint Joseph Health Hospital in London saw an influx of patients, more than 100 people were treated in the hospital, one died, but the majority were treated and released, with eleven sent to other hospitals and four were admitted. In total, 108 patients were treated for injuries, ranging from cuts to punctured lungs and bruises. The age range of the patients treated were from one-year-old to elderly individuals. At least ten others were injured by the tornado; eight people remained in hospitals according to a WLEX-TV publication on May 17.
| Name | Age | Location |
| Lisa Fortney | 50 | London |
| Leslie Leatherman | 58 | London |
| Tiffany Heim | 47 | London |
| Pamela Mason | 57 | London |
| Marshall Miracle | 25 | London |
| June Fisher | 74 | London |
| Darlene Miller | 67 | London |
| Richard McFall | 73 | London |
| Wanda McFall | 65 | London |
| Kenneth Elliott | 63 | London |
| Bobby Tillman | 76 | London |
| Bernice Tillman | 73 | London |
| Ray Cowan | 88 | London |
| Linda Sweet | 72 | London |
| Gary Sweet | 71 | London |
| Nancy Clem | 69 | London |
| Sherri Smith | 68 | London |
| Debra Edelman | 93 | Lake Cumberland |
| Melodie Godby | 69 | Rural Pulaski County |
Damage
The tornado damaged or destroyed 1,500 homes and caused $350 million in damage in Laurel County alone. The tornado received a rating of EF4 on the Enhanced Fujita scale following a damage survey, classifying the tornado as violent based on the damage it caused. Meteorologist Chuck Grier at the NWS office in Jackson said that "to get one of those in our area is quite rare and quite an impressive coming together of atmospheric conditions", referring to the tornado. According to the damage survey, EF4 damage was inflicted between two different areas along the tornado's track. The first portion of EF4 damage occurred in the Daniel Boone National Forest east of Somerset, where a farmhouse was completely destroyed and trees were debarked and denuded. The United States Forest Service advised visitors to avoid areas in advance of windfall.The second occurred within London city limits; seventeen homes in the Sunshine Hills subdivision west of the London-Corbin Airport sustained EF4-rated damage. In addition, almost consistent EF3-rated damage was inflicted by the tornado as it moved through the Daniel Boone National Forest. Thousands of trees were leveled by the tornado, traveling through the forest, where it swept through almost 30,000 acres of trees. Although the highest rating that softwood trees in the forest could receive was mid-range EF3, damage surveyors noted that there was "complete timber devastation" in the forest and that the wind speeds were likely higher than that, including at an area near Mount Victory.
Initial state assessment estimate that more than $59 million is needed to clean up more than 1.5 million cubic yards of debris from buildings and vegetation in Somerset and London. Mayor of Somerset, Alan Keck, reported that 20 businesses in the commercial area and dozens of home were damaged or destroyed by the tornado. Aerial video taken by several drone operators and storm chasers in the days following the tornado showed extreme damage in London; aerial footage was shared widely by news agencies. Damage from the tornado was also visible on satellite imagery. As of 2025, it is one of three tornadoes to inflict EF4 rated damage within the state of Kentucky; it is also the second-deadliest EF4 tornado in Kentucky post-2007 after the 2021 Western Kentucky tornado. The tornado was the strongest ever surveyed in National Weather Service Jackson's "county warning area".
Recovery efforts
The Federal Emergency Management Agency was dispatched to London to help with immediate recovery efforts. Kentucky governor Andy Beshear praised the federal response to the tornado, stating "but they've done a good job when FEMA has come in to Kentucky, and I'm grateful". Senator Rand Paul also remarked on FEMA's operations immediately following the tornado, saying "talking with the emergency management people here, they feel like the federal government—and same in Pulaski County—the federal government is doing a pretty good job right now". Operation Barbecue Relief were mobilized in London to serve meals to survivors and first responders, expecting to serve 1,500 meals per day in Kentucky. The Team Kentucky Storm Relief Fund, established by Governor Andy Beshear, and United Way of Laurel County Long-Term Disaster Fund accepted any donations the places impacted by the tornado. The Salvation Army volunteers offered meals and emotional and spiritual care in Somerset on May 17 and in London the next day, with the volunteers serving lunch and dinner at the Creek Church in Somerset for victims and volunteers on May 19. At the Creek Church, the tornado provided 200 to 300 hot meals per day to victims impacted the tornado. Looting occurred after the tornado, with looters stealing donations at the Bill Vaughn Memorial Trailer Park in London, though more donations poured in after the looting.Samaritan's Purse sent out two disaster relief units tractor trailers filled with supplies and equipment, unit seven set up a base of operation at the Calvary Baptist Church in London. Perry County Fiscal Court officials organized multiple drop-off locations to collect supplies to help victims of the tornado in London, residents of the county were urged to donate items, which included tarps for temporary shelter, protection and gift cards for food, and other essential supplies. Kroger donated $25,000 to God's Pantry Food Bank for the communities impacted by the tornado. Kroger stores in Laurel and Pulaski counties donated 24 packs of water to the areas impacted by the tornado, with the company donating box truck of hygiene products and shelf-stable food to the Laurel County Sheriff's Office to a shelter that was set up at the Laurel County High School.
Walmart and its foundation and Sam's Club partnered with nonprofit organizations to provide resources to London, raising $750,000 to support relief efforts. The Walmart Superstore located in London offered free meals through the support of Operation BBQ relief. Meade Tractor donated $100,000 to the city of London to aid in recovery efforts. Other organizations participated in relief and recovery efforts immediately following the tornado. On May 30, a town hall meeting was held in London for people affected by the tornado to ask questions about the event and discuss disaster relief in the town; FEMA and the American Red Cross were in attendance.
The same day, Governor Beshear stated that more funding was needed for recovery efforts, saying "what I'm seeing are expenses that are large enough to where I think a SAFE fund will be needed, especially for Laurel and Pulaski counties". FEMA declared six Kentucky counties a disaster area on May 23 under the identification number "DR-4875-KY", after a request for aid assistance was submitted by Beshear. The six counties included Russell, Pulaski and Laurel counties. Beshear also estimated that cleanup costs would likely total over $59 million and that of debris will need to be removed from areas where the tornado impacted.
Staffing cuts and aid controversy
The issuance of tornado warnings during the event, and staffing cuts as a whole at the National Weather Service in Jackson, Kentucky, were a talking point following the tornado. Due to staffing cuts caused by the Department of Government Efficiency, the three major NWS offices in Kentucky were all understaffed at the time of the tornado outbreak. Despite the cuts, the Jackson office was prepared to be fully staffed on May 16 due to the upcoming severe weather event. Christian Cassell, one of the lead meteorologists at the office, stated that "we saw the risk many days ago. We were already planning how we would staff days in advance". Fact-checking website Snopes refuted the claim that tornado warnings were not issued for Somerset and London as a result of staffing cuts.United States President Donald Trump allegedly initially delayed sending disaster relief to areas hit by the tornado, leaving people pleading the government for aid. On May 24 governor Beshear's request for government-led aid was approved, which included grants for temporary housing and loans to cover uninsured property losses.