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Overnight Earthquake Rattles Alabama

by Weatherboy Team Meteorologist - March 20, 2026

Today's earthquake was at the dot inside the colored, concentric circles. Image: USGS
Today’s earthquake was at the dot inside the colored, concentric circles. Image: USGS

An overnight earthquake rattled Alabama near Tuscaloosa last night, but it was weak and had no damage or injuries reported with it. According to USGS, at 12:40 am today, a magnitude 2.2 earthquake struck from a depth of 5.9 km just northeast of downtown Tuscaloosa and roughly 40 miles southwest of Birmingham.

Earthquakes with a magnitude of 2.0 or less are rarely felt or heard by people, according to USGS,  but once they exceed 2.0 more and more people can feel them. While damage is possible with magnitude 3.0 events or greater, significant damage and casualties usually don’t occur until the magnitude of a seismic event rises to a 5.5 or greater rated event.

Earthquakes are not uncommon in Alabama. This map shows epicenters of historical Alabama earthquakes since 1886 and surface and basement faults. Image: Geological Survey of Alabama
Earthquakes are not uncommon in Alabama. This map shows epicenters of historical Alabama earthquakes since 1886 and surface and basement faults. Image: Geological Survey of Alabama

According to the Geological Survey of Alabama (GSA), earthquakes aren’t completely rare in the state. According to GSA, “Most of the earthquakes we experience in Alabama are associated with the Southern Appalachian Seismic Zone (an extension of the East Tennessee Seismic Zone) that runs along the Appalachian Mountains from the northeastern corner into the central part of the state and the Bahamas Fracture Seismic Zone in southern Alabama.

The strongest earthquake to ever hit the state was a magnitude 5.1 event in 1916 in northern Shelby County.

The second and third strongest earthquakes were each rated as a magnitude 4.9 event. One struck in DeKalb County, 10 miles northeast of Fort Payne, on April 29, 2003. The earthquake was widely felt across the northern half of Alabama and Georgia, much of Tennessee, and even portions of Kentucky, North and South Carolina, and Mississippi. The other struck in Escambia County on October 24, 1997; that earthquake was responsible for a berm around a lake to fail, spilling water and fish across a road. Large cracks also developed in sand along a creek not far from the epicenter. Both 4.9 magnitude events did some damage, mainly to weaker masonry found in the northern part of the state.

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