Minnesota Travel Weather Alert: Tsunami Safety Rules Every Resident Must Know Before Summer Beach Trips

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Minneapolis, MN – As spring break travel winds down and warmer temperatures send more Minnesota residents toward coastal destinations, understanding tsunami alerts could become critical within minutes of arriving at the beach.

According to the National Weather Service and NOAA, a Tsunami Warning means dangerous coastal flooding and strong currents are expected or already happening. If you’re traveling from Minnesota to destinations like Florida, California, or the Carolinas, you must move inland immediately when a warning is issued. Leave beaches, boardwalks, and coastal roads right away and head to higher ground without delay.

A Tsunami Advisory signals strong currents and hazardous surges. While not a full evacuation, conditions near the shoreline can quickly become life-threatening. Travelers should stay out of the water and away from piers, jetties, and marinas.

A Tsunami Watch means a tsunami is possible, often after a distant earthquake. This is the time to review evacuation routes, identify higher ground, and prepare to act quickly if alerts escalate.

An Information Statement indicates no immediate threat.

Many Minnesota travelers, familiar with lakes rather than ocean coastlines, may not recognize coastal warning systems like sirens and emergency alerts. Before heading out this season, enable Wireless Emergency Alerts, review evacuation maps at your destination, and plan how to move inland within minutes if conditions change.