There is no way to know your exact local tornado warnings from this conversation alone, because the location “near me” depends on your precise position.

Quick answer

  • Check your official national or local weather service site or app immediately.
  • Use a trusted live severe weather tracker (not social media rumors) and turn on location services.
  • If you see “Tornado Warning” for your county or city, move to a safe interior room on the lowest floor right away.

How to check “near me” warnings fast

Because location is missing here, the fastest way to know if there are tornado warnings near you is to check services that detect your position automatically.

  • Open your country’s official weather agency site (for example, the U.S. National Weather Service, Environment Canada, IMD in India, etc.) and use their “local forecast” or “warnings” search by city/ZIP/postcode.
  • Use a reputable real‑time tornado or severe weather tracker that pulls directly from official warning feeds, then allow location access so it can display active warnings around you.
  • Turn on push alerts in an official weather app on your phone so it can warn you even if you are not actively checking.

What counts as a tornado warning

Understanding the wording helps you know how urgently to act.

  • “Tornado Watch” means conditions are favorable; stay alert but you may continue normal activities while monitoring updates.
  • “Tornado Warning” means a tornado is happening or imminent, based on radar or sighting; you should take shelter immediately.
  • Some trackers may also show “severe thunderstorm” warnings with possible tornado risk; treat these as a reason to stay especially aware.

If you might be under a warning right now

If the sky looks threatening or you heard sirens but are not sure, act as if a warning is in effect until you can confirm.

  • Go to an interior room on the lowest floor (basement if available) away from windows; put as many walls between you and the outside as possible.
  • Cover your head and neck with a mattress, helmet, or sturdy cushions, and keep shoes on in case of debris.
  • Avoid cars, mobile homes, and large open buildings like gyms; move to a substantial building or designated shelter if you safely can before storms arrive.

Ongoing severe weather context

Real‑time tornado and severe weather activity varies day by day, and specialized trackers now provide near‑live maps of warnings and radar signatures across regions.

  • Some sites offer experimental live pages and even continuous severe weather streams that summarize current warnings, but they always advise cross‑checking with official government products.
  • Global and regional centers maintain severe weather outlooks that show where tornado‑producing storms are more likely over the next hours to days, which can help you plan ahead even when no warning is currently active.

If you share your city, state/province, and country, a more tailored checklist can be suggested for how your local warning system works.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.