More for Oklahoma: Highest flood risk cities · Oklahoma live outlook
Current risk outlook
Flooding and heavy rain risk for New Eucha, OK.
Live conditions updated just now. Refreshes every 5–40 minutes.
This view focuses on street flooding, ponding in low-lying areas, and how heavy rain tends to behave around this city.
Live risk outlook
MODERATEModerate
Next 6–24 hours: Today: Moderate (38/100) · Rain 41% · 0.5 in · Max wind 5 to 10 mph.
2 active alerts nearby.
Sources: NOAA, NWS, SPC, NHC, FEMA, USGS.
Historical risk score
Long-term baseline derived from historical hazard activity.
58
/ 100
For typical homes located in New Eucha, OK.
Baseline context
FEMA NFHL flood zones: 5 features intersect this tile.
Compare other local risks
See how New Eucha scores across each hazard model.
City snapshot
All hazards combined
Wind risk
Roof stress and gust-driven damage
AQI risk
Current air quality and AQI signal
Lightning risk
Thunderstorm and strike exposure
Wildfire risk
Fuels, dryness, and fire potential
Tornado risk
Historic tornado corridor exposure
Hail risk
Hail frequency and roof impact potential
Local historical hazard map
New Eucha, OK
Click a tile to update scores. These layers show long-term historical baseline risk, not live warnings or short-term forecast risk.
Live flood alerts & official forecast (NWS)
Forecast office: TSA · radar KINX
Active alerts near New Eucha
Flash Flood Warning
Effective local time
Flash Flood Warning issued June 14 at 1:18AM CDT until June 14 at 5:15AM CDT by NWS Tulsa OK
Turn around, don't drown when encountering flooded roads. Most flood deaths occur in vehicles. Be especially cautious at night when it is harder to recognize the dangers of flooding. Flooding is occurring or is imminent. It is important to know where you are relative to streams, rivers, or creeks which can become killers in heavy rains. Campers and hikers should avoid streams or creeks. Please report observed flooding to local emergency services or law enforcement and request they pass this information to the National Weather Service when you can do so safely.
Flood Watch
Effective local time
Flood Watch issued June 13 at 11:28AM CDT until June 14 at 1:00PM CDT by NWS Tulsa OK
You should monitor later forecasts and be prepared to take action should Flash Flood Warnings be issued.
Protect your home before the next storm
Turn today’s risk into a checklist for your home.
Flood intelligence snapshot
FEMA flood zones (NFHL)
Dominant zone: A (50% of features)
SFHA share: 50% (feature-weighted)
NFHL features in tile: 12
Tile risk label: Moderate
Source: FEMA NFHL (MapServer).
Nearest river gauge (USGS)
No nearby USGS gauges reporting right now.
Source: USGS NWIS (instant values).
Soil saturation (model)
Soil moisture: 29% volumetric
Last 24h rain: 1.04 in
Updated: local time
Source: Open-Meteo soil model (proxy).
Protect your home before the next storm
Turn today's flood exposure into a checklist for drains, valuables, and coverage in New Eucha, OK.
5-day flood & rain outlook
Today
MODERATERain chance: 41% · 0.5 in
Max wind: 5 to 10 mph
Risk score: 38/100
Tomorrow
LOWRain chance: 5% · 0.0 in
Max wind: 0 to 5 mph
Risk score: 12/100
Tue
LOWRain chance: 2% · 0.0 in
Max wind: 0 to 5 mph
Risk score: 11/100
Wed
LOWRain chance: 22%
Max wind: 5 to 15 mph
Risk score: 19/100
Thu
MODERATERain chance: 66%
Max wind: 5 mph
Risk score: 36/100
Outlook blends NWS forecast, WPC QPF totals, and Excessive Rainfall Outlook categories.
Historical flooding exposure
Local flood data facts
Data from FEMA NFHL, USGS gauges, and Open-Meteo soil moisture.
Historical flooding exposure in New Eucha
- Lowest-lying streets and drainage chokepoints tend to flood first during heavy rain.
- Long-duration rainfall can raise ponding risk even without a named storm.
- Local elevation and canal/river networks can amplify or reduce flood impacts.
Flood & storm risk FAQs for New Eucha
Does New Eucha flood often?
Flooding risk depends on elevation, drainage, and rainfall intensity. This model summarizes localized flood patterns from public datasets.
What causes street flooding without a storm surge?
Short bursts of heavy rain can overwhelm drains; longer events can saturate soils and keep water standing even after rain ends.