Key Points

The Southwest Monsoon has arrived in Kerala a week earlier than usual, bringing heavy rains and thunderstorms. IMD warns of extreme rainfall along the west coast and Odisha, while northern states battle severe heatwaves. A developing low-pressure system may worsen conditions in eastern India later this week. The weather department has issued orange alerts for multiple regions facing flood risks.

Key Points: Southwest Monsoon Hits Kerala Early IMD Warns of Heavy Rains

  • Monsoon arrives 8 days early in Kerala
  • Heavy rainfall forecast for west coast and Odisha
  • Heatwaves to continue in Rajasthan, Punjab, Haryana
  • Low-pressure system may intensify rains in eastern states
3 min read

Southwest monsoon arrives early in Kerala; IMD warns of heavy rain, storms across India

Early monsoon arrives in Kerala with IMD predicting heavy rains, storms across India while heatwaves persist in northern states.

"Southwest Monsoon has set in over Kerala today, the 24th May, 2025, against the expected date of 1st June. - Manorama Mohanty, IMD Bhubaneswar"

Bhubaneswar, May 24

The Southwest Monsoon has arrived over Kerala on Saturday, nearly a week ahead of the usual onset date of June 1, according to the India Meteorological Department (IMD).

According to the India Meteorological Department (IMD), "heavy to very heavy rainfall likely to continue over west coast (Kerala, Karnataka, coastal Maharashtra and Goa) during next 7 days with possibility of extremely heavy rainfall over Kerala during 24th-26th; coastal Maharashtra and Goa and Madhya Maharashtra on 24th; Coastal and Ghat areas of Karnataka during 24th-27th; Ghat areas of Tamil Nadu on 25th & 26th May, 2025."

According to the IMD, a depression is present over the East Central Arabian Sea and adjoining south Konkan coast. It is expected to move eastward and cross south coastal Maharashtra by noon on May 24.

Meanwhile, severe heatwave conditions are forecast to continue in Rajasthan until May 27 and in Punjab, Haryana, Jammu, and Kashmir until May 26.

While speaking to ANI, Manorama Mohanty, Director of IMD Bhubaneswar, said, "Southwest Monsoon has set in over Kerala today, the 24th May, 2025, against the expected date of 1st June. Thus, the southwest monsoon has set in over Kerala 8 days before the scheduled date. Heavy rainfall, thunderstorm activity with Lightning, and Gusty surface winds are very likely over the districts of Odisha from 24th to 30th May 2025. Thunderstorm with lightning with surface wind speed reaching 40-50 kmph and Heavy rainfall is very likely to occur in the afternoon/evening hours at one or two places over the districts of Mayurbhanj, Keonjhargarh, Balasore, Bhadrak, Kendrapara, Jagatsinghpur, Ganjam, Gajapati, Rayagada, Koraput, and Malkangiri."

She added, "Rain is happening and one trough is extending from east central Arabian Sea where depression is there and trough is drawn from that cyclonic circulation which is associated with the depression over east central Arabian Sea to the South Chhattisgarh."

While southern and coastal states braced for downpours, northern and northwestern India continued to battle heat waves and severe heat waves, especially in Rajasthan, Punjab, Haryana, and Jammu and Kashmir. IMD warned that these conditions will persist until May 27 in several regions.

The IMD stated that Vidarbha, Chhattisgarh, Gangetic West Bengal, Jharkhand, and Bihar will see scattered to fairly widespread rain with thunderstorms and gusty winds through May 30. Bihar is likely to experience thunderstorm winds reaching speeds of 70 kmph on May 25 and 26.

A low-pressure area is expected to develop over the west-central and adjoining north Bay of Bengal around May 27, adding to the rainfall threat in Odisha and eastern states.

The IMD also warned that Northeast India will face daily light to moderate rainfall with thunderstorms and lightning from May 24 to 30, with heavy rain expected in Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Meghalaya, Nagaland, Manipur, Mizoram, and Tripura.

Manorama Mohanty said, "Because of freeze and also because of the change in wind direction or state is likely to get rainfall activity at many places in the district during the next 7 days in addition to that, lightning and some activity was between 40 to 50 kilometres very lightly and also isolated heavy rainfall activities also there."

She added, "An Orange warning has been issued and isolated heavy rainfall activity will be there... For tomorrow, on May 25th, light to moderate rain, very lightly in addition to that, isolated heavy rainfall activity, thunderstorm, lightning and gusty wind 40 to 50 kilometres per hour, very likely in the district of Mars Ganjamagiri, Sundar and some districts."

The IMD also predicted the dust storms across West and East Rajasthan till May 27 and hailstorms in Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rajesh K.
Early monsoon is both blessing and curse for farmers like me in Kerala. Our crops need water but too much too soon can damage tender plants. Hope IMD warnings help people prepare better this time. Last year's floods were devastating 😔
P
Priya M.
While South gets rains, we're suffering 45°C heat in Rajasthan! This extreme weather pattern is worrying. Government should focus more on climate adaptation measures across all states, not just disaster response after it happens.
A
Amit S.
Good to see IMD giving such detailed forecasts now. But are local administrations prepared? Last time Mumbai floods showed gap between warnings and ground action. Hope this year civic bodies have better flood management plans ready!
S
Sunita R.
Monsoon arriving early is nature's way of telling us climate change is real! 🌧️ We need to stop cutting trees and start rainwater harvesting seriously. In Bangalore, our lakes are either flooded or dry - no balance!
V
Vikram J.
As someone who travels between Delhi and Chennai frequently, this weather contrast is crazy! One side drowning in rain, other side burning up. IMD does good work but wish state governments would coordinate better on disaster prep.
N
Neha P.
Concerned about Northeast warnings - Assam floods happen every year but solutions seem temporary. Hope this time authorities take long-term measures. Also praying for farmers across India dealing with these unpredictable patterns 🙏

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