I can’t tell you exactly when a specific tornado will hit your location, and no online article or forum can safely do that in real time.

However, I can help you figure out what to do right now :

1. How tornado timing is actually given

Meteorologists and emergency services never say “the tornado will hit at 3:17 p.m.”. Instead, they issue:

  • Tornado outlooks (hours to days ahead, general risk areas).
  • Tornado watches (conditions are favorable over the next several hours).
  • Tornado warnings (a tornado is occurring or imminent in a specific area, usually a 15–45 minute window).

So the only reliable “when will the tornado hit?” information comes from an official warning that includes a small time window, not an exact minute.

2. What you should do right now

Because I don’t know your exact location or have live radar, you need to check local, official sources immediately.

  1. Go to your country’s official weather service (for example, in the U.S. this is the National Weather Service / weather.gov).
  1. Type in your city or ZIP/postal code and look for:
    • Any “Tornado Warning” or “Tornado Watch” banners.
 * A local radar or “Severe Weather” page.
  1. Turn on:
    • Local TV or radio news (they interrupt regular programs for tornado warnings).
 * A trusted weather app with _emergency alerts_ enabled.
  1. If there is a Tornado Warning for your area, go to shelter immediately (no waiting to “see it”).

Example: Recent severe storms along the U.S. East Coast in March 2026 produced tornado warnings with very short lead times, and people were told to take shelter as soon as the warning came out, without waiting for an exact “hit time.”

3. Basic safety if a tornado may be close

If you suspect a tornado might be near (sirens, alerts, or threatening sky), follow standard safety guidance.

  • Go to the lowest level of a sturdy building, in an interior room away from windows (basement, interior hallway, bathroom).
  • Cover your head and neck with something sturdy (mattress, helmet, thick blankets).
  • Avoid cars, mobile homes, and large open rooms like gyms if at all possible; move to a safer building.

4. Why forums and trackers can’t give you an exact “hit time”

There are sites that track tornado warnings and show live discussions, but they are not a substitute for official alerts.

  • Community comments often include speculation like “1 tornado incoming on Texas!! WARNING,” which is not a precise forecast and can be misleading.
  • Even advanced “future radar” and trackers show possible paths, not a guaranteed minute-by-minute schedule.

They can be interesting or helpful for enthusiasts, but your safety decisions must be based on official meteorological sources and local emergency management , not on forums.

Bottom line:
No one can safely tell you the exact minute a tornado will hit your location. Check your official weather service, local news, or a trusted weather app right now; if a Tornado Warning is in effect for your area, take shelter immediately and stay there until the all-clear is given.

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