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Press Contacts

ShakeAlert System Operations
USGS — Pasadena, CA

rdegroot@usgs.gov | +1 626 372 3262

ShakeAlert System Operations
USGS — Pasadena, CA

rdegroot@usgs.gov | +1 626 372 3262

Quick Facts

ShakeAlert is the U.S. Geological Survey-managed Earthquake Early Warning (EEW) System. It is the nation’s only public EEW system and serves more than 50 million residents and visitors.

Current coverage area: California, Oregon, and Washington.

How alerts reach the public: Through the federal Wireless Emergency Alert (WEA) system, cell phone operating systems, smartphone apps, and automated systems used by USGS-licensed Alert Delivery Partners.

ShakeAlert does not predict earthquakesit detects earthquakes and can deliver alerts seconds after an earthquake begins to those expected to feel strong shaking.

Key Messages

If you feel shaking or get an alert, immediately Drop, Cover, and Hold On.

Or take a modified action, depending on your situation.

Seconds matter.

ShakeAlert can give people time to protect themselves before strong shaking arrives.

ShakeAlert is not earthquake prediction.

It detects earthquakes and already in progress and issues alerts in real time.

FAQs for journalists

1. How much warning time can ShakeAlert provide?

Typically, ShakeAlert provides a few seconds to tens of seconds before strong shaking arrives, depending on the alert receiver’s distance from the epicenter. Closer to the epicenter means less warning; farther away means more time to take protective action.

2. What about false or missed alerts?
3. What determines who receives an alert?
4. Are alerts accessible to everyone?
5. Where does the data come from?
6. How can media request site access or interviews?
7. How should USGS and partners be cited?

Videos, Animations, & Gifs

Licensed footage for editorial use.

How the ShakeAlert System Works

A 2-min explainer showing how seismic sensors detect earthquakes and issue alerts

How the ShakeAlert System Works

A 2-min explainer showing how seismic sensors detect earthquakes and issue alerts

How the ShakeAlert System Works

A 2-min explainer showing how seismic sensors detect earthquakes and issue alerts

Graphics & Photos

Logos

Preparedness

Alerts and Delivery

How the System Works

WEA Alert Photos

Case Studies

ShakeAlert helps protect students and staff by sending earthquake alerts through it’s public address system.

Read Full Case Study

Metrolink implemented ShakeAlert-powered earthquake early warning alerts that automatically slow its trains to protect its riders, crew, and infrastructure.

Read Full Case Study

NASA Deep Space Network’s massive antennas in Southern California are now protected by ShakeAlert. So are employees at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory campus at Caltech.

Read Full Case Study

The city set up ShakeAlert-powered automatic closure of water system valves when earthquake shaking is expected to prevent massive water loss if a pipe is damaged.

Read Full Case Study

How to Get Alerts

ShakeAlert does not send alerts directly to individuals. Alerts reach the public through:

Learn more about alert delivery methods: Factsheet

Attribution & Partner Credits

ShakeAlert is a U.S. Geological Survey product developed in collaboration with state, university, and private partners.

Partners Include: California Office of Emergency Services, Caltech, University of Washington, University of California, Berkeley Seismology Lab, Oregon Department of Emergency Management, and others.