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Drought improves across the Midwest, but long-term precipitation deficits remain going into summer. Read more in the latest drought status update.



Advancing Drought Science and Preparedness Across the Nation

The National Integrated Drought Information System (NIDIS) is a multi-agency partnership that coordinates drought monitoring, forecasting, planning, and information at national, tribal, state, and local levels.

Current Conditions

U.S. Drought Monitor Category
% of U.S.
16.7
15.6
9.8
5.7
1.9
32.9
Percent of Normal Precipitation (%)
100%
Departure from Normal Max Temperature (°F)
0

News
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News & Events
In 2024, heat and a lack of rainfall led to widespread drought across the Mid-Atlantic states (Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia, and the District of Columbia). For some locations, this was the worst drought the region experienced in more than two decades. NOAA’s National Integrated Drought Information System (NIDIS), Northeast Regional Climate Center (
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News & Events
The state of Missouri is working to better track water from the sky into the soil, in the hopes that expanded soil moisture data across the state can help decision-makers better predict, prepare for, and track both drought and flood events. Following damaging flooding in 2019, a multi-state, multi-agency working group with representatives from Missouri, Kansas, Iowa, and Nebraska
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News & Events
A key to an effective drought early warning system is having the people and processes in place before drought happens. In August 2024, parts of Ohio reached Exceptional Drought (D4), the most intense level of the U.S. Drought Monitor. This was also the first time ever that Ohio had areas of Exceptional Drought (D4) on the U.S. Drought Monitor since it began in 2000. Even though this was the