New: Colour-coded weather alerts

Get your weather forecasts and alerts: Use our mobile app WeatherCAN or visit our Weather Information map. Stay safe during severe weather with guidance from Public Safety Canada.

What are colour-coded weather alerts

Our weather alerts are colour-coded. The colours tell you what risk the weather is to you. Every type of weather alert—Warnings, Advisories, and Watches—now has a colour when it is issued. The weather alert colours move from yellow, to orange, to red, as the potential risk increases.

Alert colours

There are 3 types of alert colours and symbols:

Yellow

Figure 1: Yellow alert

Yellow alert symbol: A yellow band surrounding a solid black circle. The solid black circle contains a yellow exclamation mark inside it.

Orange

Figure 2: Orange alert

Orange alert symbol: An orange band surrounding a solid black diamond. The solid black diamond contains an orange exclamation mark inside it.

Red

Figure 3: Red alert

Red alert symbol: A red band surrounding a solid white triangle. The solid white triangle contains a red exclamation mark inside it.

What the colours mean

The same weather can have different impacts, depending on timing, location, and population. That’s why each weather alert has a colour, to tell you the level of impact possible in your area, so you can prepare appropriately.

Here are examples of the different impacts of yellow, orange, and red wind warnings.

Important: These images are demonstrative; they do not show all the potential impacts of wind warnings.

Yellow Warning - Wind

In a Yellow Warning - Wind, you may see:

Figure 4: Potential impacts from a Yellow Warning – Wind

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Long description

Representation of the potential impacts of a Yellow Warning – Wind. A house with a tall tree beside it, a red car and hydro poles in front. No lights are on in the house, branches are scattered in front, a potted plant has blown over, and there is visible damage to the roof.

Orange Warning - Wind

In an Orange Warning - Wind, you may see:

Figure 5: Potential impacts from an Orange Warning – Wind

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Long description

Representation of the potential impacts of an Orange Warning – Wind. A house with a tall tree beside it, a red car and hydro poles in front. No lights are on in the house, a window is broken, and smaller branches are scattered around. Both potted plants have blown over, the hydro cable has broken, and larger branches have fallen onto the roof and car causing significant damage.

Red Warning - Wind

In a Red Warning - Wind, you may see:

Figure 6: Potential impacts of a Red Warning – Wind

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Long description

Representation of the potential impacts of a Red Warning – Wind. A house with a tall tree beside it, a red car and hydro poles in front. No lights are on in the house and multiple windows are broken, with damage to the house’s siding. Smaller branches and significant debris are scattered around. A hydro pole and power lines have blown over. The tree has fallen onto the roof of the house causing significant damage. Another large branch has fallen on the car.

Remember to always read the full weather alert text, no matter the colour. We always include actions you can take to keep safe. Learn how we choose weather alert colours.

Marine warnings and watches

Marine weather warnings are part of a separate alerting program and do not use colour-coded weather alerts. The Canadian Marine Warning Program will continue to use a single-tier warning system.

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2025-11-26