FloodZoneMap.org

Flash Flood — Sevier, AR

Feb 8, 2023

A surface low was accompanied by a stalled frontal boundary that extended near and along the Interstate 30 corridor of Southwest Arkansas, Southeast Oklahoma, and far Northeast Texas. Aloft, a closed low was positioned across eastern New Mexico into the Texas Panhandle with a trailing trough well south into northern and central Mexico. This pattern allowed for plentiful Pacific moisture to combine with Gulf of Mexico moisture to produce widespread heavy rainfall across these areas along and nort

Source: NOAA National Weather Service Storm Events Database (event 1078832). Narrative written by NWS staff at the time of the event.

Flood Risk Context for Sevier, AR

This event is one of many recorded floods in Sevier County. See the full FEMA flood zone map, NFIP claim totals, and disaster history for the area.

View Sevier County flood data →

More Flood Stories

Flash Flood

Sevier, AR · Nov 28, 2015

A deep upper level trough became cut off from the westerlies across the Inter-Mountain West. This trough helped to bring up Gulf of Mexico moisture as well as Eastern Pacific moisture into the Southern Plains and Lower Mississippi Valley.

Read the full account →
Tropical Storm$200K damage

Sevier, AR · Sep 13, 2008

Hurricane Ike came onshore across extreme southeast Texas during the late night hours of September 12th and the pre-dawn hours of September 13th.

Read the full account →
Flash Flood

Sevier, AR · Jan 30, 2025

A closed upper level low pressure system shifted east from Southeast Colorado into the Oklahoma/Texas Panhandles into Western Oklahoma on January 30th, with an increased southerly low level flow allowing warm, humid, and very moist air to return back north across Northeast…

Read the full account →
Flash Flood

Sevier, AR · Dec 16, 2024

A slowly advancing cold front across Southern Arkansas continued moving southward late into the evening on December 16th. Concurrently, warm sector southerly flow provided weak but sufficient surface convergence just ahead of the cold front.

Read the full account →