M4.9 Earthquake 40 km ENE of Shahrak-e Kūlūrī, Iran — July 19, 2026
2026-07-19 02:25:20 UTC (9 hours ago) · approx. 5:25 AM UTC+3 local
Felt by 2 people across nearby locations.
On July 19, 2026 at 02:25 UTC, a magnitude 4.9 shallow crustal earthquake struck 40 km ENE of Shahrak-e Kūlūrī, Iran, at a depth of 10.0 km and coordinates 32.5523°, 48.8375°. This earthquake was detected by 59 seismic stations with excellent location accuracy and was assigned a USGS significance rating of 370, placing it among routine seismic activity.
Physical scale: An earthquake of magnitude 4.9 releases seismic energy equivalent to roughly 338 metric tons of TNT. Empirical fault-scaling laws (Wells & Coppersmith, 1994) estimate the subsurface rupture length at approximately 1.4 km — a useful intuition for the size of the slip patch on the fault.
The epicenter is located in Iran, a region characterized by the Zagros fold-and-thrust belt, where the Arabian Plate collides with Eurasia at 20-25 mm per year. The nearest mapped fault system is the Zagros Fault. View all earthquakes in Iran.
Learn more: Magnitude scale · Aftershock sequences

Did You Feel It? — community-reported shaking
Aggregated felt-report intensity from 2 citizen responses to the USGS Did You Feel It? system. Each colored zone represents the average MMI from reports in that area.

Source: U.S. Geological Survey Did You Feel It?. View on USGS · submit your own report
Earthquake Details
48.8375°E
Technical Information
Common Questions
How strong was the magnitude 4.9 earthquake near Shahrak-e Kūlūrī, Iran?
The magnitude 4.9 earthquake that struck 40 km ENE of Shahrak-e Kūlūrī, Iran on July 19, 2026 at 02:25 UTC had a depth of 10.0 km. For context, this was a light earthquake commonly felt near the epicenter.
Where did the earthquake occur?
The earthquake epicenter was located at 32.5523°, 48.8375°, which is 40 km ENE of Shahrak-e Kūlūrī, Iran. View all earthquakes in Iran.
Were there aftershocks?
Aftershock activity is monitored continuously by the USGS. Aftershock sequences from magnitude 4.9 earthquakes can continue for several days and gradually diminish over time.
Has Iran had earthquakes this big before?
The largest recorded earthquake in Iran was the M7.8 Tabas earthquake of September 16, 1978. Today's magnitude 4.9 event is significantly smaller than that historical record.
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Location
Authoritative source: USGS event page (event ID: us7000t1q8). All scientific values on this page are sourced verbatim from the USGS feed.
Cite this page: EarthquakeTracker.org. (2026, July 19, 2026). M4.9 Earthquake 40 km ENE of Shahrak-e Kūlūrī, Iran — July 19, 2026. Retrieved July 19, 2026 from https://www.earthquaketracker.org/earthquakes/event/us7000t1q8/