Maharashtra monsoon toll: 62 dead since June 1, red alert on coastline

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Maharashtra monsoon toll: 62 dead since June 1, red alert on coastline

Synopsis

Maharashtra's monsoon has turned deadly — 62 lives lost and 200 animals dead in just five weeks, with structural collapses and lightning strikes the top killers. Now a red alert covers the entire coastline, fishing boats are grounded, and districts like Palghar have already absorbed over 457% of their normal seasonal rainfall. The worst may not be over.

Key Takeaways

62 people have died and 200 animals have been killed across Maharashtra since the monsoon began on 1 June , according to the SDMA .
Structural collapses killed 25 and injured 41 ; lightning strikes killed 23 and injured 17 .
Thane recorded 196.9 mm and Palghar recorded 185.4 mm of rainfall in the past 24 hours .
Palghar has received 457.3% and Pune 435.4% of their normal cumulative rainfall since 1 June .
INCOIS has issued a red alert for the entire Maharashtra coastline until midnight, with fishing and recreational sea activity banned.
Several major rivers have breached danger levels, triggering evacuations of low-lying villages.

Maharashtra's monsoon crisis deepened on Wednesday, 8 July, as relentless rainfall over the preceding 24 hours triggered flash floods, river overflows, and structural collapses across the state. According to the situation summary released by the Maharashtra State Disaster Management Authority (SDMA), the state has recorded 62 human fatalities and 200 animal deaths since the monsoon season commenced on 1 June.

Rainfall Intensity and Affected Districts

The State Emergency Operation Center (SEOC) reported extreme precipitation across several coastal and western districts in the last 24 hours. Thane recorded 196.9 mm of rainfall, followed by Palghar at 185.4 mm, Raigad at 134.1 mm, Mumbai Suburban at 125.0 mm, and Pune at 69.4 mm.

Cumulative rainfall since 1 June has pushed nearly all districts into the 'Large Excess' category. Palghar has received 457.3% of its normal seasonal rainfall for this period, while Pune has recorded 435.4% of its seasonal norm — figures that underscore the severity of this year's monsoon relative to historical averages.

Causes of Death and Injuries

Of the 62 fatalities recorded since 1 June, structural collapses have been the single largest killer, claiming 25 lives and injuring 41 across districts including Nashik, Thane, and Mumbai Suburban. Thunder and lightning strikes have accounted for 23 deaths and 17 injuries, making them the second-leading cause.

Landslides and mudflows have claimed 6 lives and injured 4, primarily in mountainous districts — Sindhudurg, Ratnagiri, Raigad, Satara, and Pune. Tree falls have taken 6 more lives, while direct flooding has caused 2 deaths. In the most recent daily incidents, a wall collapse in Mumbai Suburban left one person injured, and a tree fall in Ratnagiri injured two others.

Lightning strikes have also devastated livestock, accounting for 181 of the 200 total animal deaths recorded across the state.

Rivers in Spate, Evacuations Underway

Heavy and sustained rainfall has caused severe swelling across Maharashtra's river networks. Several major rivers have officially breached their critical danger levels, prompting local evacuations and high-alert warnings for low-lying villages. Disaster management teams are actively deployed in flood-prone zones, though officials have not yet disclosed the total number of persons evacuated.

Coastal Red Alert and Sea Restrictions

The Indian National Centre for Ocean Information Services (INCOIS) has issued a red alert for the entire Maharashtra coastline, valid until midnight. Extremely high waves and strong tidal surges are forecast, posing a severe threat to coastal infrastructure and maritime safety.

Disaster management officials have advised a complete suspension of all nearshore recreational activities. Small fishing vessels and commercial boats have been strictly ordered not to venture into the sea, given the imminent threat of wave surges and severe coastal erosion. This comes amid a broader pattern of intensifying monsoon seasons along India's western coast, with the Konkan belt repeatedly bearing disproportionate rainfall in recent years.

Point of View

Not floods, are the leading cause of death points to a chronic building-safety failure that monsoons annually expose but policymakers rarely address between seasons. Palghar receiving over 457% of its normal rainfall is an extreme-weather signal, yet evacuation numbers remain undisclosed, raising questions about the state's real-time response capacity. Maharashtra has faced this pattern repeatedly along the Konkan coast; the red alert machinery exists, but the pre-monsoon audit of vulnerable structures clearly does not.
NationPress
8 Jul 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

How many people have died in Maharashtra due to the monsoon in 2025?
As of 8 July 2025, 62 people have died in Maharashtra since the monsoon season began on 1 June , according to the Maharashtra State Disaster Management Authority (SDMA). Structural collapses and lightning strikes are the two leading causes of death.
Why has INCOIS issued a red alert for the Maharashtra coast?
The Indian National Centre for Ocean Information Services (INCOIS) issued a red alert for the entire Maharashtra coastline — valid until midnight on 8 July — due to forecast of extremely high waves and strong tidal surges. Fishing vessels and commercial boats have been ordered to stay ashore.
Which districts in Maharashtra received the most rainfall?
Thane recorded the highest single-day rainfall at 196.9 mm, followed by Palghar at 185.4 mm, Raigad at 134.1 mm, Mumbai Suburban at 125.0 mm, and Pune at 69.4 mm in the 24 hours preceding 8 July.
What is the cumulative rainfall situation across Maharashtra?
Cumulative rainfall since 1 June has placed nearly all Maharashtra districts in the 'Large Excess' category. Palghar has received 457.3% and Pune 435.4% of their normal seasonal rainfall for this period.
What precautions have authorities advised for Maharashtra residents?
Authorities have ordered a complete suspension of nearshore recreational activities and banned small fishing vessels and commercial boats from venturing to sea. Evacuations are underway in low-lying villages near rivers that have breached danger levels, particularly in coastal and western districts.
Nation Press
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