Asia-Pacific Typhoon Tracker
Asia-Pacific storm awareness dashboard with live weather map and official-source links.
Asia-Pacific Live Weather Map
Windy layerThis regional map is for situational awareness. Confirm warnings and evacuation instructions with official agencies.
Asia-Pacific Typhoon Information
Regional guideUse this page as a wider Asia-Pacific typhoon map for public-safety awareness and planning.
It is designed as a clean entry point for live maps, active storm cards, official-source links, and regional safety pages.
Asia-Pacific Safety Checklist
Before landfall- 1Check active storms and official source links before travel.
- 2Know evacuation routes, shelter locations, and local emergency contacts.
- 3Prepare food, water, medicine, documents, flashlights, batteries, and power banks.
- 4Avoid flooded roads, storm-surge zones, rivers, and unstable coastal areas.
Active Typhoons
View all storms →BAVI-26
Feed headline: Red notification for tropical cyclone BAVI-26. Population affected by Category 1 (120 km/h) wind speeds or higher is 35.288 million…
- Movement
- See official bulletin
- Current Location
- Western Pacific Ocean
- Alert
- Red
GDACS · Open source
Open storm detail →MAYSAK-26
Feed headline: Orange notification for tropical cyclone MAYSAK-26. Population affected by Category 1 (120 km/h) wind speeds or higher is 0 (16.374…
- Movement
- See official bulletin
- Current Location
- Gulf of Tonkin near northern Vietnam
- Alert
- Orange
GDACS · Open source
Open storm detail →Asia-Pacific Typhoon FAQs
Help & SEOIs LiveTyphoonTracker.com an official warning source?
No. LiveTyphoonTracker.com is an awareness dashboard. Verify warnings, evacuation orders, and signal numbers with official agencies and local emergency officials.
Why does this page show a live map and storm cards?
The live map helps with current wind and weather awareness, while storm cards summarize synced or manually entered storm records with source labels.
How often should I check for updates?
During an active tropical cyclone threat, check official bulletins frequently because track, wind, rainfall, and surge hazards can change quickly.