27/03/2026
Event Review: Significant flooding occurred again across the Hawaiian Islands March 19-24, 2026.
A surface low pulled lingering deep tropical moisture that was over and just south of the Big Island from the recent kona storm back over the state. An upper trough provided instability and lift for clusters of heavy rainfall and thunderstorms with very intense rain rates. A slow-moving trough provided focus for low-level convergence to create nearly ideal conditions for flash flooding, especially from Oahu and points eastward. While the main atmospheric features of this event were weaker than the earlier kona storm and rainfall was less widespread, the impacts were more severe due to the already saturated ground–requiring less rainfall to result in runoff and rapid flooding.
View the attached photos to see some of the highest 6 day rainfall totals from each island during this event.