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Weather Event Codes


NOAA SAME and Event Codes Reference

This page consolidates two reference sets you need to program a weather alert radio correctly: the Specific Area Message Encoding (SAME) county code system, and the EAS event codes that the National Weather Service and other authorities broadcast through NOAA Weather Radio. Both are maintained by the National Weather Service, but the original references are split across several NWS office pages and are easy to lose.

What SAME does: SAME tags each NOAA Weather Radio broadcast with a county code and an event code. A SAME-capable receiver decodes the tags and decides whether to alert based on the user’s programmed counties and selected event types. Without SAME, a radio alerts on every watch and warning anywhere within the transmitter’s coverage area.

Part 1: SAME County Codes (6-digit FIPS)

Every county and county equivalent in the United States has a 6-digit numeric code. The format follows the federal FIPS (Federal Information Processing Standards) standard with one prefix digit added for SAME use.

Code structure

P S S C C C

P = Part-county indicator (0 = entire county)
S S = State FIPS code (01-56)
C C C = County FIPS code (001-840)

For example, 042133 is York County, Pennsylvania:

  • 0 = entire county (not a partial-county alert)
  • 42 = Pennsylvania state FIPS
  • 133 = York County FIPS

The P digit can be a value from 1-9 when an alerting authority chooses to issue a partial-county alert (for example, “northeastern Caddo County, Oklahoma”). Most consumer radios treat any P value other than 0 as the same county for alerting purposes; a few newer units like the Midland WR120DSP can filter on partial-county codes specifically.

Finding your county code

The NWS maintains the official county-code lookup here:

weather.gov/nwr/counties — official NWS SAME county code listing, searchable by state.

You can also call the automated NWR-SAME hotline at 1-888-NWR-SAME (1-888-697-7263) for codes by state and county, or look up your county on the NWS station coverage map at weather.gov/nwr/Maps.

Program multiple codes if you live near a county line. Severe weather does not respect county boundaries. If you can be at home, at work, or at school in three different counties on any given day, program all three. Most certified desktop radios hold 23-25 county codes.
FFTP Product

Let the ASAR do the legwork for you

Looking up your home county is easy. Building the full picture of which counties you actually need to program — home, work, school, the route between them, the storm tracks that affect your area, the adjacent counties whose problems become your problems within an hour — is harder. That is exactly what the Area-Specific Assessment Report (ASAR) is built to deliver.

What’s in an ASAR for weather-radio programming:

  • Every county within your selected radius (50-mile, 100-mile, or custom) with its 6-digit SAME code already pulled.
  • The NOAA Weather Radio transmitter(s) covering your area, the broadcast frequency for each, and the coverage footprint so you know which frequency to program.
  • The local NWS Weather Forecast Office (WFO) responsible for your area, with contact channels and SKYWARN program information.
  • The dominant weather hazards for your AOR — what you should actually be programmed to alert on — drawn from historical event data, not guesswork.
  • Adjacent-county and upstream-watershed considerations for flood and severe weather, so the codes you program reflect how weather actually moves into your area.

An ASAR turns the SAME code list from “a thing I have to figure out” into “a thing already in your report.” For households near county or state lines, near a watershed, or on the leading edge of a typical storm track, the surrounding-area context is the part that matters most.

Order an ASAR for your home, business, or operational area.

View ASAR ›

Special SAME codes

Code Meaning When to use
000000 All-zeros / Any location Programs the radio to alert on every SAME message received, regardless of county. Useful for a base-camp or operations radio that needs to see everything in the transmitter footprint.
PSSCCC Specific county or partial county The normal use case. Program one code per county you want to monitor.
SSC000 Entire state Some radios accept a state-wide code. Useful only for very small states; most users want county-level filtering.

Part 2: EAS / SAME Event Codes

Every SAME message carries a three-letter event code that identifies the type of alert. The full operational list is below, grouped by category. Codes marked ALWAYS in the rightmost column are always broadcast by NWR transmitters in their coverage area. Codes marked SOMETIMES are broadcast depending on the office, the event, and local EAS plans.

Weather-Related Events

Code Event Type NWR
BZW Blizzard Warning Warning SOMETIMES
CFA Coastal Flood Watch Watch SOMETIMES
CFW Coastal Flood Warning Warning SOMETIMES
DSW Dust Storm Warning Warning SOMETIMES
EWW Extreme Wind Warning Warning SOMETIMES
FFA Flash Flood Watch Watch SOMETIMES
FFW Flash Flood Warning Warning ALWAYS
FFS Flash Flood Statement Statement SOMETIMES
FLA Flood Watch Watch SOMETIMES
FLW Flood Warning Warning SOMETIMES
FLS Flood Statement Statement SOMETIMES
HWA High Wind Watch Watch SOMETIMES
HWW High Wind Warning Warning SOMETIMES
HUA Hurricane Watch Watch ALWAYS
HUW Hurricane Warning Warning ALWAYS
HLS Hurricane Statement Statement SOMETIMES
SVA Severe Thunderstorm Watch Watch ALWAYS
SVR Severe Thunderstorm Warning Warning ALWAYS
SVS Severe Weather Statement Statement SOMETIMES
SQW Snow Squall Warning * Warning SOMETIMES
SMW Special Marine Warning Warning SOMETIMES
SPS Special Weather Statement Statement SOMETIMES
SSA Storm Surge Watch Watch SOMETIMES
SSW Storm Surge Warning Warning SOMETIMES
TOA Tornado Watch Watch ALWAYS
TOR Tornado Warning Warning ALWAYS
TRA Tropical Storm Watch Watch SOMETIMES
TRW Tropical Storm Warning Warning SOMETIMES
TSA Tsunami Watch Watch SOMETIMES
TSW Tsunami Warning Warning SOMETIMES
WSA Winter Storm Watch Watch SOMETIMES
WSW Winter Storm Warning Warning SOMETIMES

* Snow Squall Warnings (SQW) are broadcast over NOAA Weather Radio but are not conveyed to the broader Emergency Alert System.

Non-Weather-Related Events (state and local)

These codes cover civil emergencies, infrastructure events, and law enforcement situations. Activation through EAS is optional for broadcasters.

Code Event Type
AVA Avalanche Watch Watch
AVW Avalanche Warning Warning
BLU Blue Alert (law enforcement officer in danger) Emergency
CAE Child Abduction Emergency (AMBER Alert) Emergency
CDW Civil Danger Warning Warning
CEM Civil Emergency Message Emergency
EQW Earthquake Warning Warning
EVI Evacuation Immediate Warning
FRW Fire Warning Warning
HMW Hazardous Materials Warning Warning
LEW Law Enforcement Warning Warning
LAE Local Area Emergency Emergency
TOE 911 Telephone Outage Emergency Emergency
NUW Nuclear Power Plant Warning Warning
RHW Radiological Hazard Warning Warning
SPW Shelter in Place Warning Warning
VOW Volcano Warning Warning

Administrative Events

Code Event Type
ADR Administrative Message Statement
DMO Practice / Demo Warning Test
RMT Required Monthly Test Test
RWT Required Weekly Test Test

National Codes

Code Event Type
EAN Emergency Action Notification (national level) Emergency
NIC National Information Center (legacy) Statement
NPT National Periodic Test Test
NST National Silent Test Test
EAN cannot be disabled. A national-level Emergency Action Notification activates every certified receiver in the country. This is by design. The same is true on most radios for TOR (Tornado Warning), SVR (Severe Thunderstorm Warning), and EVI (Evacuation Immediate). When you tighten event-code filtering on your radio, the truly dangerous events stay on by default.

FCC Naming Convention

The FCC established a naming convention for EAS event codes. For most new and existing hazardous state and local codes, the third letter follows this pattern:

W
Warning

An event that alone poses a significant threat to public safety or property, where probability and location are high and onset is relatively short.

A
Watch

Meets warning criteria, but onset time, probability, or location is uncertain. Conditions are favorable; act on a watch by getting ready, not by sheltering.

E
Emergency

An event that alone may not cause direct injury or damage, but indirectly creates conditions threatening public safety. Examples: 911 outage, large-area power failure.

S
Statement

Follow-up information to an active warning, watch, or emergency. Often updates or cancellations.

Three legacy event codes do not follow this convention but remain operational: TOR (Tornado Warning), SVR (Severe Thunderstorm Warning), and EVI (Evacuation Immediate). These were established before the convention and are not being renamed.

Practical Programming Guidance

Step 1: Confirm your NOAA frequency

NOAA Weather Radio broadcasts on seven VHF frequencies: 162.400, 162.425, 162.450, 162.475, 162.500, 162.525, and 162.550 MHz. Use the NWS station listing at weather.gov/nwr/station_listing to find the transmitter that covers your address, and program that frequency into your radio.

Step 2: Program your SAME county codes

Enter your home county code first. If you live within ten miles of a county border, or commute to a different county for work, add those codes too. The radio will alert for any programmed county.

Step 3: Decide on event filtering

For a household radio, leave the default event set alone for the first month. After you have lived with the alert pattern, decide which non-critical statements to suppress. Suggested keep-on list at minimum: TOR, SVR, FFW, HUW, TSW, EWW, TOA, FFA, HUA, EVI, CDW, CEM, NUW, RHW, SPW, HMW, FRW, EAN.

Step 4: Test the radio weekly

NWS broadcasts a Required Weekly Test (RWT) on most transmitters every Wednesday between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. local time, weather permitting. Confirm the radio receives it. If you miss two weeks in a row, troubleshoot the antenna, battery, or frequency selection before severe weather season arrives.

Step 5: Pair with other channels

NOAA Weather Radio is not a single-point solution. Pair it with Wireless Emergency Alerts on your phone, a local SKYWARN or weather net on amateur radio, and a working knowledge of your local NWS office’s social channels. When one channel fails, the others catch the alert.

If you do not yet own a SAME radio: see the companion comparison chart for current model recommendations. Look for the Public Alert certification mark on the box. A radio without SAME programming will eventually annoy you into turning it off, and a turned-off radio cannot wake you up.
Source authority: National Weather Service, NOAA Weather Radio program (weather.gov/nwr). Event code list current as of the operational set published by NWS. FIPS county code system is administered by the U.S. Census Bureau and adopted by NOAA for SAME use. For the live official sources, see the NWS event codes page at weather.gov/nwr/eventcodes, the SAME description at weather.gov/nwr/nwrsame, and the county code lookup at weather.gov/nwr/counties.

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