Arkansas Weather Preparedness: What Residents Should Know About Lightning Safety Heading Into 2026

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Little Rock, Arkansas – Arkansas emergency officials are using the winter months to reinforce lightning safety awareness after 21 people across the United States were killed by lightning in 2025, the highest annual total since 2019.

According to the National Weather Service and the National Lightning Safety Council, most lightning fatalities last year occurred during outdoor activities such as farming, construction, yard work, fishing, and recreation near water. While Arkansas did not record a lightning-related death in 2025, officials stress that the state remains vulnerable once thunderstorm season returns.

Lightning risk in Arkansas typically increases from late spring through summer, especially during afternoon and evening storms that develop quickly across the Ozarks, Arkansas River Valley, and Delta. Rural areas, open farmland, job sites, athletic fields, and lakes can leave people exposed when storms build with little warning.

State and local officials say winter is the ideal time to strengthen safety habits ahead of 2026. If thunder is heard anywhere in Arkansas, residents should move indoors immediately to a substantial building or enclosed vehicle. Open fields, isolated trees, farm equipment, metal structures, and bodies of water significantly increase the risk of being struck.

Emergency management leaders emphasize that early action saves lives. Lightning safety outreach is expected to ramp up statewide as warmer weather approaches, with the goal of keeping Arkansas residents prepared, informed, and safe throughout the next thunderstorm season.