A cloudburst is an extreme kind of sudden, very heavy rainfall over a small area in a short time, often leading to flash floods and landslides.

Quick Scoop

What is a cloudburst?

  • A cloudburst is an intense downpour where rainfall can exceed about 100 mm in an hour over a very small region (often less than 20–30 km²).
  • It usually feels like the sky has “opened up” at once, with rain sometimes accompanied by thunder and hail.
  • Because so much water falls so fast, it often causes sudden flooding, mudslides and heavy damage in valleys and towns downstream.

Think of it this way: if 25 mm of rain falls over 1 km² in a few minutes, that’s tens of thousands of tons of water dumped almost instantly.

How does a cloudburst happen?

Cloudbursts are mainly linked to strong thunderstorms and tall storm clouds called cumulonimbus.

Key steps:

  1. Warm, moist air rises fast
    • Hot ground heats the air above it, which becomes lighter and rises quickly, carrying a lot of water vapour upward.
  1. Storm clouds build up
    • As the air rises, it cools and the vapour condenses into water droplets and ice, forming huge storm clouds that can reach 10–15 km high.
 * Strong upward currents inside the cloud keep pushing droplets up, so large amounts of water collect in the cloud instead of falling right away.
  1. Water gets “stored” in the cloud
    • Violent updrafts act like an invisible support, holding back a large volume of raindrops and ice particles at high levels.
 * This “storage” phase means the cloud becomes heavily loaded with moisture, like a reservoir in the sky.
  1. Sudden release – the “burst”
    • If the upward currents weaken or the cloud becomes too heavy, the support collapses.
 * A huge amount of water then drops in a short time over a small area, producing the sudden, violent downpour we call a cloudburst.
  1. Terrain can make it worse
    • In hilly and mountainous regions (like the Himalayas), moist air is forced upward by the slopes (orographic lift), which helps build very tall, moisture‑laden clouds.
 * Because valleys are narrow and drainage is limited, the intense rain quickly turns into flash floods and debris flows.

Why do cloudbursts often occur in mountains?

  • Mountains push moist winds upwards, cooling the air faster and triggering strong convection and storm‑cloud growth.
  • Local low‑pressure zones can form over peaks, pulling clouds in and concentrating rainfall over a very small area.
  • Steep slopes send water rushing downhill rapidly, so even a short cloudburst can devastate villages and roads below.

Are cloudbursts becoming more common?

  • Recent discussions in weather and climate circles link more frequent extreme rain events, including cloudburst‑like downpours, to a warming atmosphere that can hold more moisture.
  • Warmer air means more water vapour available, so when storms do form, they can sometimes release more intense rainfall in a short period.

Real‑world impacts

  • Cloudbursts have been blamed for deadly flash floods and landslides in mountainous regions such as the Himalayas, where villages have been buried under mud and debris in minutes.
  • Beyond immediate flooding, they damage roads, bridges, agriculture, and can trigger secondary disasters like glacial lake outburst floods when combined with unstable ice or lakes.

In simple terms, a cloudburst is not a cloud “breaking” physically, but a storm system suddenly dumping a large, stored volume of water over one small area in very little time.

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