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06 Sept 2025

Storm tracker: Exact time Storm Éowyn will hit Donegal in weather latest

Met Éireann has issued a series of Status Red weather warnings for Storm Éowyn with the first coming into place at 2am on Friday

STORM TRACKER: Exact time Storm Éowyn will hit your county in scary weather latest

Expected to be one of the worst storms in living memory, Storm Éowyn has prompted a blanket Status Red warning

Ireland is bracing for the arrival of Storm Éowyn in the early hours of Friday morning. Expected to be one of the worst storms in living memory, Storm Éowyn has prompted a blanket Status Red warning for the entire country from Met Éireann.

The warnings will be valid at different times in different counties but you can track the centre of the huge Atlantic storm below:

All warnings predict "gale to storm force southerly winds becoming westerly will bring severe, damaging and extremely destructive gusts in excess of 130km/h."

Workplaces, schools, business and public transport will shut down for most of Friday due to the storm which could see 180km/h wind gusts hit the west coast with one forecaster at Weather Alerts Ireland describing the readings for it as "scary."

Met Éireann say the storm represents a "danger to life" and list other impacts as, "extremely dangerous travelling conditions, unsafe working conditions, disruption and cancellations to transport, many fallen trees, significant and widespread power outages, impacts to communications networks, cancellation of events, structural damage, wave overtopping and coastal flooding in low-lying and exposed areas."

READ NEXTMet Éireann make important change to rare Status Red warning ahead of Storm Éowyn

The red warning for Carlow, Kilkenny, Wexford, Cork, Kerry, Limerick, Waterford is in place from 2am to 10am on Friday. For Clare and Galway, the warning is in place from 3am to 12 noon. Leitrim, Mayo, Sligo will have a red warning from 4am to 12 noon. Cavan, Monaghan, Dublin, Kildare, Laois, Longford, Louth, Meath, Offaly, Westmeath, Wicklow, Roscommon and Tipperary will be under a red warning from 6am to noon on Friday while Donegal will be under a red warning from 6am to 3pm.

Separately, a Status Orange wind warning for Storm Éowyn will remain in place for the entire country from 2am to 5pm on Friday. 

In its wider forecast on the disruptive weather, Met Éireann is also forecasting snow for some parts of the country during Storm Éowyn, adding further to the hazardous situation.

They say: "The centre of Storm Eowyn will track just off the northwest coast on Friday morning with a swathe of extremely strong and damaging winds extending across the country bringing disruption.

"Gale Force southwest winds over land, will veer westerly by afternoon with Storm Force winds likely in some coastal areas. There'll be scattered squally showers and more persistent rain is likely across the north of the country.

"Showers will turn increasingly wintry as the day progresses. Maximum afternoon temperatures of 6 to 9 degrees but feeling much colder due to the wind-chill factor. On Friday night, winds will begin to abate but it will stay rather blustery. A cold night with clear spells and scattered showers, some wintry. Lowest temperatures of -2 to +3 degrees with some frost possible towards dawn on Saturday as winds continue to ease."

There will be no improvement over the weekend with a second band of stormy weather set to hit Ireland on Sunday, possibly hampering clean-up efforts after Storm Éowyn.

Deputy Head of Forecasting at Met Éireann, Liz Coleman, said: "There will be a short respite from the weather on Saturday as Éowyn moves away, but we are also watching a different low-pressure system, forecast to bring impactful winds and further rain on Sunday. However, in this case the situation is still too uncertain; we will provide updates as the week progresses.”

Met Éireann forecast for Sunday reads: "It looks set to turn wet and windy on Sunday with outbreaks of rain spreading from the south. Maximum temperatures of 5 to 9 degrees in strong and gusty south to southeast winds with gales at the coast."

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