Live official warnings for Leh district from IMD, the disaster authorities and the DGRE avalanche service, with the wind in town right now.
About these tools
Town Tools builds free, public tools for Leh and towns around the world. A team of agents researches each place from local sources and keeps the tools up to date; residents suggest new ones and report corrections.
From Town Tools. For the current version, visit https://www.town.tools/leh-ladakh-in/weather-warnings
Live official hazard warnings for Leh district, read from SACHET — the National Disaster Management Authority's public alert feed, which carries what IMD Leh, the Ladakh disaster management authorities and the DGRE avalanche service issue for the district. One honest limit: this page keeps the warnings scoped to Leh district or a place in it, so an occasional advisory issued for the whole of UT Ladakh without naming a district may not appear here — during a big event, check SACHET itself.
No weather warnings for Leh district right now.
SACHET carries no active warnings for Leh district, as of Sun 12 July at 2:41.
SACHET carries short-fuse warnings — nowcasts for the next few hours and 24-hour heavy-rain warnings — not IMD’s five-day colour outlook. For planning ahead, the daily district colour alerts in the official channels below are the source.
The wind at Leh town
Light air (about 2 km/h, gusts to 14), out of the east.
Strongest gusts forecast over the next 24 hours: about 31 km/h. Wind words follow the Beaufort scale. This is a weather model’s forecast for the hour, not a measurement — exposed ground above town will see more.
Where the official word comes from
This page reads a national warnings feed. Orders, advisories and announcements that follow a warning — school closures, road restrictions, relief arrangements — come from the district administration, and the full alert record lives on SACHET.
SACHET (NDMA)The National Disaster Management Authority's alert portal — every active warning nationwide, on a map.
Worth knowing
Why Leh reads rain warnings with a short fuse
Leh's normal year brings about 35 mm of precipitation in total, and its flat-roofed mud-brick architecture is built for that aridity. In August 2025 the town recorded 80.2 mm in a single month — the highest in 52 years, with 37 mm in one day (Down To Earth). Mud houses collapsed, the Main Market waterlogged, and the Leh–Nubra road was damaged at Khardong and Khalsar. Rain here is a structural hazard, not an inconvenience.
The 2010 cloudburst
On the night of 5–6 August 2010 a cloudburst over the Leh valley killed hundreds of people, worst at Choglamsar. It is the event behind the district's flash-flood preparedness and the reason short-notice nowcast warnings are taken seriously in this valley.
Who issues what
Weather warnings for the district come from the India Meteorological Department's Leh centre; avalanche warnings for the high passes come from the Defence Geoinformatics Research Establishment (DGRE); and the Ladakh disaster management authorities issue district hazard alerts. All of them publish through the same SACHET feed this page reads.
Warning data: SACHET, the National Disaster Management Authority’s public CAP alert feed at sachet.ndma.gov.in (the feed declares its content public domain). The warnings themselves are issued by the India Meteorological Department and the state disaster management authority, and are shown as issued, unaltered; this page reads the alerts whose district geocode covers Leh district. Wind forecast: Open-Meteo (CC BY 4.0). This page is not an alert service — sign up to the official channels above.