You’re asking an important question, but there isn’t enough specific information to safely say when the cyclone will hit your area.

Direct answer

I cannot reliably tell you the exact time the cyclone will hit your location because:

  • You did not specify which cyclone or your exact region.
  • Cyclone landfall timing depends on constantly updated forecasts that I cannot live‑refresh for your precise town or district.

What you should do right now

To get an accurate answer for “when will the cyclone hit” for your place, do this immediately:

  1. Go to your national meteorological service
    • Examples:
      • India: IMD (Mausam) “Cyclone Information”.
      • Australia: Bureau of Meteorology “Tropical Cyclone Advice”.
      • US/Caribbean: National Hurricane Center.
    • On their site, enter your region or select the active cyclone name, then check:
      • Latest advisory time.
      • Forecast track map.
      • Estimated landfall window (date + local time).
      • Wind and rainfall timing for your specific coast/region.
  2. Check a trusted weather app or site
    • Use apps like your country’s official met department app or major global weather services.
    • Turn on location permissions so the app can give:
      • “Severe weather alert” timing.
      • Hour‑by‑hour forecast of wind and rain.
  3. Follow local authorities
    • Listen to:
      • TV and radio bulletins.
      • Official social media (disaster management, police, local administration).
    • They usually translate technical cyclone forecasts into:
      • “Dangerous conditions expected from [time range].”
      • “Landfall likely between [time A] and [time B].”

How timing is usually described

Cyclone warnings typically give you:

  • A time window , not an exact minute, e.g.:
    • “Likely landfall between early morning and noon Friday.”
    • “Damaging winds expected from tonight, worsening by tomorrow morning.”
  • Separate timings for:
    • When strong winds begin.
    • When peak winds and heaviest rain occur.
    • When conditions start easing.

So even once you find “when the cyclone will hit,” expect wording like:

  • “From late evening today”
  • “Between midnight and early morning”
  • “During the afternoon”

Safety checklist while you wait

While you confirm the exact timing from official sources, use this quick list:

  • Charge phones, power banks, and keep a battery torch ready.
  • Store drinking water and some ready‑to‑eat food.
  • Move important documents, electronics, and valuables to higher shelves.
  • Stay away from windows; tape or secure glass if possible.
  • If you are in a very low‑lying or coastal area, be ready to move to a safer shelter if authorities advise.

Bottom note: Information about “when will the cyclone hit” must come from your official weather service and local authorities in real time. Use what I’ve shared as guidance on how to get precise, location‑specific timing and how to prepare, but always trust and follow official warnings over anything else.