A weather watch, warning, and advisory are three of the most common alerts the National Weather Service (NWS) issues, and the difference between them comes down to one thing: how certain and how immediate the threat is. In short, a watch means be prepared, a warning means take action now, and an advisory means be aware.
Knowing which is which is the difference between glancing at the sky and getting to shelter. Here is the quick version, then the detail.
Weather Watch, Warning, and Advisory: A Quick Comparison
| Alert | What it means | What to do | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| Watch Be prepared |
Conditions are favorable for hazardous weather. It may not happen, but the risk has gone up. Issued hours in advance, sometimes a day. | Review your plan, stay near a way to get warnings, and be ready to act fast. | Tornado Watch, Severe Thunderstorm Watch, Flash Flood Watch, Winter Storm Watch |
| Warning Take action |
The hazard is occurring, imminent, or likely, and it threatens life or property. This is the urgent one. | Act now. Get to shelter or follow the protective action for that hazard. | Tornado Warning, Severe Thunderstorm Warning, Flash Flood Warning, Winter Storm Warning |
| Advisory Be aware |
Hazardous weather is occurring or expected, but it is less serious than a warning. Expect significant inconvenience, and risk if you ignore it. | Use caution, especially driving. Small changes to your plans go a long way. | Wind Advisory, Winter Weather Advisory, Heat Advisory, Dense Fog Advisory, Frost Advisory |
What a Weather Watch Means
A watch is issued when the risk of hazardous weather has increased, but the timing, location, or whether it happens at all is still uncertain. Think of it as a heads-up that the atmosphere is loaded. A Tornado Watch, for example, can cover dozens of counties for six hours or more, well before any single storm forms.
A watch buys you lead time, and that is its whole purpose. It is the right moment to bring in or tie down outdoor furniture, trash cans, and anything the wind can throw, to charge your phone, and to make sure you have a way to receive warnings if conditions get worse. Then keep an eye on the forecast, because a watch is often the step right before a warning.
What a Weather Warning Means
A warning is the serious one. It is issued when hazardous weather is occurring, imminent, or likely, which means conditions already pose a threat to life or property. If you are in the path, the time to prepare is over and the time to act has started.
What “act” means depends on the hazard. A Tornado Warning means get to the lowest interior room, away from windows. A Flash Flood Warning means move to higher ground and never drive into water on a road. A Severe Thunderstorm Warning means get inside and away from windows, because 60 to 90 mph straight-line winds do real damage. Unlike a watch, a warning is usually small and specific, often a single county or a polygon covering the exact path of the storm.
What a Weather Advisory Means
An advisory covers conditions that are hazardous but less severe than what triggers a warning. The weather is expected to cause significant inconvenience, and if you are not careful it could become dangerous, but it is not the immediate threat to life that a warning signals. A Wind Advisory, a Dense Fog Advisory, or a Heat Advisory all fall here.
Advisories are easy to shrug off, and that is the trap. A Dense Fog Advisory is a leading cause of multi-car pileups. A Heat Advisory is a real risk for anyone outside for long. Treat an advisory as a reason to adjust: slow down, build in extra time, check on people who are vulnerable.
One note for the future: the NWS has been working to simplify its hazard messaging and has signaled it may eventually retire the standalone “advisory” label in favor of plainer wording that spells out the hazard directly. The watch and warning structure is not changing. We will update this post as that rolls out.
A Simple Way to Remember the Difference
Meteorologists often reach for a kitchen analogy, and it works. A watch means the ingredients are out on the counter: the atmosphere has what it needs to make the storm, but nothing is baking yet. A warning means the cake is in the oven: it is happening, so act. An advisory is a smaller batch, a nuisance that still deserves your attention.
Or, even shorter: a watch is “be ready,” a warning is “do it now,” and an advisory is “watch your step.”
🔔 Don’t rely on hearing it on the news. iAlert sends watches, warnings, and advisories for your exact location by text or email, the moment the NWS issues them. Sign up for severe weather alerts.
What to Do When Each Is Issued
- Watch: Review your plan, identify your safe spot, and make sure you have two ways to get warnings, including one that can wake you at night.
- Warning: Act immediately. Move to shelter for tornadoes, to higher ground for flooding, and indoors and away from windows for severe thunderstorms.
- Advisory: Use caution. Slow down on the road, add travel time, and check on anyone who is more vulnerable to heat, cold, or wind.
- Always: A warning can be issued with little or no watch beforehand, so do not wait for the “next step.” Take the alert in front of you at face value.
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