Ohio landscape

Severe Weather in Ohio

Population: 11.8M Updated Apr 13, 2026
Low
Severe Weather

Prevalence Trend

6-week history
Mar 9 Mar 16 Mar 23 Mar 30 Apr 6 Apr 13
Low
Moderate
High
Very High
↓ Decreasing

Summary

Severe Weather is Low in Cleveland, Columbus, and Cincinatti.

Key Insights

High
Week of Mar 15
Low
Week of Mar 8
Trend
Increasing

County Prevalence Map

Updated daily
Ohio county-level Severe Weather prevalence map
County-level Severe Weather prevalence — Ohio — Apr 13, 2026
Published by Hubbub World — health risk data for all US states and counties. Get the bub app for today's data and 30-day forecasts.

Severe Weather risk levels incorporate National Weather Service alerts, temperature extremes, precipitation forecasts, and wind conditions. The index reflects the overall weather-related health risk including heat stress, cold exposure, and severe storm activity.

Data is updated multiple times daily based on NWS forecast cycles.

Sources: National Weather Service, NOAA, Hubbub World weather risk model

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Severe Weather?
Severe Weather risk reflects the likelihood and health impact of weather hazards in a given area — including extreme heat, extreme cold, heavy precipitation, high winds, thunderstorms, and other severe events that could affect health and safety.
How is Severe Weather risk measured in Ohio?
Severe Weather risk in Ohio is reported as a weekly score on a four-point scale: Low, Moderate, High, and Very High. The score reflects the modeled burden of Severe Weather across the state, validated against public health data from CDC, HHS, NOAA, and other authoritative sources. Methodology details are available at https://www.hubbubworld.com/intelligence#methodology.
How is this data collected and updated?
Hubbub World pulls data from multiple authoritative sources: the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) for flu, COVID-19, and RSV surveillance; the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) for hospital and community health indicators; the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) for weather and air quality; and the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology (AAAAI) for allergen reporting. Data is collected continuously from these sources and aggregated to the county and state level on a weekly cadence.
What methodology does Hubbub World use to calculate Severe Weather risk?
Hubbub World fits proprietary models on top of the underlying surveillance, environmental, and weather data to produce comparable risk scores across all U.S. counties. Each of the seven risks is reported on a four-point scale (Low, Moderate, High, Very High) so the scores are interpretable without needing the raw underlying numbers. The full methodology — including the modeling approach, validation against authoritative sources, and known limitations — is documented at https://www.hubbubworld.com/intelligence#methodology.
Where can I get current Severe Weather data for Ohio?
Current Severe Weather risk levels and 30-day forecasts for Ohio are exclusive to the bub app, available free on iOS, Android, and Apple Watch at https://bub.hubbubworld.com. This web page is the six-week historical archive — the bub app is where today's data and forecasts live.
Is Severe Weather seasonal in Ohio?
Several of the risks Hubbub World tracks have a seasonal pattern in Ohio — flu and RSV typically peak in fall and winter, allergies vary with tree, grass, and weed pollen seasons, and severe weather risks shift with the calendar. Severe Weather risk in Ohio is reported weekly so seasonal patterns are visible across the six-week archive on this page. For 30-day forward forecasts that show how seasonal patterns are evolving, get the bub app at https://bub.hubbubworld.com.

Last updated: April 13, 2026

Data refreshed weekly

Get today's Severe Weather risk + 30-day forecast — Download bub