Earthquakes on June 5, 2026
250
EARTHQUAKES on June 5, 2026
24-hour UTC period · USGS data
LARGEST: M5.6 — Balleny Islands region
10 km deep
Normal activitycompared to daily average (~250/day)
Magnitude Breakdown
M5.0+
7
M4.0–4.9
22
M3.0–3.9
9
M2.0–2.9
40
M1.0–1.9
172
Activity Summary
250
Total earthquakes
~250
Daily average
Normal
Activity level
7
M5.0+ events
Geographic Breakdown
By US State
Top Countries (International)
Significant Earthquakes (M4.5+)
5.6
Balleny Islands region
20:58 UTC · 10.0 km deep
5.3
97 km NNE of Lospalos, Timor Leste
15:57 UTC · 170.2 km deep
5.3
Pacific-Antarctic Ridge
13:40 UTC · 10.0 km deep
5.2
2 km WSW of Santa María, Mexico
20:55 UTC · 32.9 km deep
Felt by 19
5.2
1 km ESE of San Roque, Philippines
13:57 UTC · 10.0 km deep
Felt by 27
5.1
103 km NNW of Villa General Roca, Argentina
06:54 UTC · 136.0 km deep
5.0
Kermadec Islands region
22:22 UTC · 10.0 km deep
4.9
33 km NE of Dharamsala, India
16:34 UTC · 10.0 km deep
Felt by 99
Earthquake Map — June 5, 2026

All Earthquakes — June 5, 2026
Showing 30 of 78 (filtered from 250)
(Filtered to M2.0+. Change the magnitude filter to see smaller events.)
| Time ↓ | Mag ↕ | Location ↕ | Depth ↕ | Felt ↕ | MMI | Alert | Status | Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 23:19:15 UTC | 4.3mb | 45 km E of Sarangani, Philippines 5.450°, 125.868° | 90.6 km | - | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
A magnitude 4.3 earthquake was recorded 45 km E of Sarangani, Philippines on June 5, 2026 at 23:19 UTC. It arrived roughly 9 hours after a larger magnitude 4.5 mainshock in the same 20 km area, placing it within the typical aftershock window. At a depth of 90.6 km, the event was intermediate depth. The offshore location combined with this depth is characteristic of seismicity along descending slabs. The epicenter is at 5.450°, 125.868°. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M4.3 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 23:18:43 UTC | 2.5md | 24 km SSE of Somes Bar, CA 41.184°, -123.350° | 37.6 km | - | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
This magnitude 2.5 event was detected 24 km SSE of Somes Bar, CA on June 5, 2026, with origin time 23:18 UTC. The event originated approximately 37.6 km below the surface, classifying it as shallow crustal. Geolocation places the event at 41.184°N, -123.350°E. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M2.5 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 22:48:29 UTC | 2.0ml | 58 km S of Whites City, New Mexico 31.648°, -104.391° | 6.1 km | - | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
The USGS recorded this magnitude 2.0 earthquake 58 km S of Whites City, New Mexico at 22:48 UTC on June 5, 2026. It arrived roughly 1 hours after a larger magnitude 3.8 mainshock in the same 20 km area, placing it within the typical aftershock window. This was a shallow crustal earthquake, focused at 6.1 km depth. The event was offshore — common for earthquakes along subduction zones and transform plate boundaries. The epicenter is at 31.648°, -104.391°. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M2.0 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 22:40:10 UTC | 3.8ml | 57 km S of Whites City, New Mexico 31.661°, -104.395° | 6.1 km | - | IV | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
June 5, 2026 brought a magnitude 3.8 earthquake 57 km S of Whites City, New Mexico, logged at 22:40 UTC. Peak ground motion corresponded to MMI 4.5, classified as moderate shaking. At a depth of 6.1 km, the event was shallow crustal. The event was offshore — common for earthquakes along subduction zones and transform plate boundaries. Coordinates: 31.661°, -104.395°. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M3.8 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 22:24:14 UTC | 4.7mb | Izu Islands, Japan region 31.520°, 141.704° | 10.0 km | - | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
Seismographs logged a magnitude 4.7 earthquake in the Izu Islands, Japan region with origin time 22:24 UTC on June 5, 2026. The hypocenter lay at 10.0 km, placing this in the shallow crustal category. The epicenter is at 31.520°, 141.704°. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M4.7 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 22:22:02 UTC | 5.0mb | Kermadec Islands region -29.331°, -176.848° | 10.0 km | - | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
This magnitude 5.0 event was detected in the Kermadec Islands region on June 5, 2026, with origin time 22:22 UTC. The event originated approximately 10.0 km below the surface, classifying it as shallow crustal. The epicenter is at -29.331°, -176.848°. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M5.0 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 22:08:11 UTC | 4.5mb | 31 km N of Nasinu, Fiji -17.784°, 178.534° | 563.1 km | - | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
The USGS recorded this magnitude 4.5 earthquake 31 km N of Nasinu, Fiji at 22:08 UTC on June 5, 2026. At 563.1 km, this deep-focus earthquake originated far below the brittle crust, deep inside the mantle. The offshore location combined with this depth is characteristic of seismicity along descending slabs. The epicenter is at -17.784°, 178.534°. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M4.5 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 22:05:44 UTC | 2.2ml | 56 km S of Whites City, New Mexico 31.670°, -104.354° | 6.4 km | - | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
On June 5, 2026, worldwide seismic activity registered a magnitude 2.2 earthquake 56 km S of Whites City, New Mexico at 22:05 UTC. This was a shallow crustal earthquake, focused at 6.4 km depth. The event was offshore — common for earthquakes along subduction zones and transform plate boundaries. The epicenter is at 31.670°, -104.354°. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M2.2 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 22:02:07 UTC | 4.7mb | 38 km SE of Severo-Kuril’sk, Russia 50.460°, 156.551° | 76.3 km | - | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
On June 5, 2026, worldwide seismic activity registered a magnitude 4.7 earthquake 38 km SE of Severo-Kuril’sk, Russia at 22:02 UTC. At a depth of 76.3 km, the event was intermediate depth. The offshore location combined with this depth is characteristic of seismicity along descending slabs. Geolocation places the event at 50.460°N, 156.551°E. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M4.7 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 21:47:24 UTC | 2.0ml | 57 km S of Whites City, New Mexico 31.655°, -104.361° | 8.2 km | - | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
This magnitude 2.0 event was detected 57 km S of Whites City, New Mexico on June 5, 2026, with origin time 21:47 UTC. This event falls inside the aftershock decay of a nearby magnitude 2.2 earthquake that occurred about 2 hours earlier. The hypocenter lay at 8.2 km, placing this in the shallow crustal category. The event was offshore — common for earthquakes along subduction zones and transform plate boundaries. Geolocation places the event at 31.655°N, -104.361°E. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M2.0 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 21:16:34 UTC | 2.2ml | 4 km E of Adak, Alaska 51.881°, -176.568° | 1.0 km | - | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
Seismographs logged a magnitude 2.2 earthquake 4 km E of Adak, Alaska with origin time 21:16 UTC on June 5, 2026. Coming 1 hours after a magnitude 2.5 earthquake in the immediate vicinity, it is most likely an aftershock of that larger rupture. At a depth of just 1.0 km, this was a very shallow event, close enough to the surface that modest magnitudes can produce significant local shaking. The event was offshore — common for earthquakes along subduction zones and transform plate boundaries. Coordinates: 51.881°, -176.568°. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M2.2 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 21:16:29 UTC | 2.5ml | 3 km ESE of Adak, Alaska 51.867°, -176.579° | 9.1 km | - | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
Reports of a magnitude 2.5 earthquake 3 km ESE of Adak, Alaska came in on June 5, 2026 at 21:16 UTC. In the 72 hours after this event, the USGS recorded 5 smaller earthquakes within 20 km, consistent with an ongoing aftershock sequence rooted here. This was a shallow crustal earthquake, focused at 9.1 km depth. Coordinates: 51.867°, -176.579°. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M2.5 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 21:13:28 UTC | 2.6md | 16 km W of Petrolia, CA 40.335°, -124.478° | 19.0 km | 1 | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
At 21:13 UTC on June 5, 2026, a magnitude 2.6 tremor occurred 16 km W of Petrolia, CA. A small number of nearby observers (1) submitted felt reports to the USGS. The hypocenter lay at 19.0 km, placing this in the shallow crustal category. The event was offshore — common for earthquakes along subduction zones and transform plate boundaries. Coordinates: 40.335°, -124.478°. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M2.6 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 21:03:48 UTC | 4.5mb | 56 km W of Catuday, Philippines 16.376°, 119.289° | 10.0 km | - | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
This magnitude 4.5 event was detected 56 km W of Catuday, Philippines on June 5, 2026, with origin time 21:03 UTC. The hypocenter lay at 10.0 km, placing this in the shallow crustal category. The event was offshore — common for earthquakes along subduction zones and transform plate boundaries. Geolocation places the event at 16.376°N, 119.289°E. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M4.5 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 20:58:09 UTC | 5.6mww | Balleny Islands region -61.768°, 161.330° | 10.0 km | - | - | green | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
On June 5, 2026 at 20:58 UTC, a magnitude 5.6 earthquake struck in the Balleny Islands region. The USGS PAGER system assigned a green alert level for this event, signalling no significant casualties or damage expected. It is the largest earthquake currently listed for worldwide seismic activity on June 5, 2026. The hypocenter lay at 10.0 km, placing this in the shallow crustal category. The epicenter is at -61.768°, 161.330°. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M5.6 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 20:55:03 UTC | 5.2mww | 2 km WSW of Santa María, Mexico 16.765°, -98.411° | 32.9 km | 19 | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
On June 5, 2026, worldwide seismic activity registered a magnitude 5.2 earthquake 2 km WSW of Santa María, Mexico at 20:55 UTC. 19 people reported feeling the earthquake via the USGS Did You Feel It? system. It ranks as the fourth largest event in the current dataset. This was a shallow crustal earthquake, focused at 32.9 km depth. The epicenter is at 16.765°, -98.411°. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M5.2 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 20:20:04 UTC | 4.0mwr | 176 km WSW of Te Anau, New Zealand -46.093°, 165.666° | 12.0 km | - | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
A magnitude 4.0 seismic event took place 176 km WSW of Te Anau, New Zealand on June 5, 2026 at 20:20 UTC. The hypocenter lay at 12.0 km, placing this in the shallow crustal category. Geolocation places the event at -46.093°N, 165.666°E. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M4.0 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 20:13:25 UTC | 2.7ml | 52 km N of Petersville, Alaska 62.963°, -150.794° | 110.1 km | - | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
On June 5, 2026 at 20:13 UTC, a magnitude 2.7 earthquake struck 52 km N of Petersville, Alaska. The hypocenter lay at 110.1 km, placing this in the intermediate depth category. The offshore location combined with this depth is characteristic of seismicity along descending slabs. Geolocation places the event at 62.963°N, -150.794°E. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M2.7 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 20:10:56 UTC | 2.4ml | 3 km S of Healy, Alaska 63.822°, -148.973° | 114.7 km | - | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
At 20:10 UTC on June 5, 2026, a magnitude 2.4 tremor occurred 3 km S of Healy, Alaska. The event originated approximately 114.7 km below the surface, classifying it as intermediate depth. The offshore location combined with this depth is characteristic of seismicity along descending slabs. The epicenter is at 63.822°, -148.973°. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M2.4 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 19:47:17 UTC | 2.5ml | 29 km SSE of Midland, Texas 31.766°, -101.933° | 5.9 km | 1 | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
A magnitude 2.5 seismic event took place 29 km SSE of Midland, Texas on June 5, 2026 at 19:47 UTC. A small number of nearby observers (1) submitted felt reports to the USGS. The hypocenter lay at 5.9 km, placing this in the shallow crustal category. The epicenter is at 31.766°, -101.933°. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M2.5 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 19:33:50 UTC | 2.2ml | 58 km S of Whites City, New Mexico 31.652°, -104.396° | 6.1 km | - | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
At 19:33 UTC on June 5, 2026, a magnitude 2.2 tremor occurred 58 km S of Whites City, New Mexico. In the 72 hours after this event, the USGS recorded 3 smaller earthquakes within 20 km, consistent with an ongoing aftershock sequence rooted here. The hypocenter lay at 6.1 km, placing this in the shallow crustal category. The event was offshore — common for earthquakes along subduction zones and transform plate boundaries. Geolocation places the event at 31.652°N, -104.396°E. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M2.2 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 19:11:14 UTC | 3.1ml | 107 km SSE of Sand Point, Alaska 54.447°, -159.833° | 35.0 km | - | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
This magnitude 3.1 event was detected 107 km SSE of Sand Point, Alaska on June 5, 2026, with origin time 19:11 UTC. The hypocenter lay at 35.0 km, placing this in the shallow crustal category. The epicenter is at 54.447°, -159.833°. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M3.1 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 18:52:35 UTC | 4.8mb | 121 km W of Buala, Solomon Islands -8.096°, 158.490° | 10.0 km | - | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
June 5, 2026 brought a magnitude 4.8 earthquake 121 km W of Buala, Solomon Islands, logged at 18:52 UTC. At a depth of 10.0 km, the event was shallow crustal. The event was offshore — common for earthquakes along subduction zones and transform plate boundaries. The epicenter is at -8.096°, 158.490°. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M4.8 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 18:10:36 UTC | 2.3ml | 12 km SE of Pearsall, Texas 28.808°, -99.011° | 7.0 km | - | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
This magnitude 2.3 event was detected 12 km SE of Pearsall, Texas on June 5, 2026, with origin time 18:10 UTC. Coming 1 hours after a magnitude 2.5 earthquake in the immediate vicinity, it is most likely an aftershock of that larger rupture. The hypocenter lay at 7.0 km, placing this in the shallow crustal category. The event was offshore — common for earthquakes along subduction zones and transform plate boundaries. Coordinates: 28.808°, -99.011°. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M2.3 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 18:03:10 UTC | 2.5ml | 12 km SE of Pearsall, Texas 28.812°, -99.003° | 7.0 km | - | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
June 5, 2026 brought a magnitude 2.5 earthquake 12 km SE of Pearsall, Texas, logged at 18:03 UTC. At a depth of 7.0 km, the event was shallow crustal. The event was offshore — common for earthquakes along subduction zones and transform plate boundaries. Geolocation places the event at 28.812°N, -99.003°E. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M2.5 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 17:21:26 UTC | 2.7ml | 22 km S of Chiniak, Alaska 57.407°, -152.248° | 41.0 km | - | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
A magnitude 2.7 earthquake was recorded 22 km S of Chiniak, Alaska on June 5, 2026 at 17:21 UTC. At a depth of 41.0 km, the event was shallow crustal. The event was offshore — common for earthquakes along subduction zones and transform plate boundaries. Coordinates: 57.407°, -152.248°. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M2.7 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 17:15:23 UTC | 2.5ml | 4 km SE of Adak, Alaska 51.848°, -176.578° | 12.3 km | - | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
On June 5, 2026 at 17:15 UTC, a magnitude 2.5 earthquake struck 4 km SE of Adak, Alaska. In the 72 hours after this event, the USGS recorded 6 smaller earthquakes within 20 km, consistent with an ongoing aftershock sequence rooted here. The event originated approximately 12.3 km below the surface, classifying it as shallow crustal. The event was offshore — common for earthquakes along subduction zones and transform plate boundaries. Coordinates: 51.848°, -176.578°. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M2.5 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 16:50:46 UTC | 4.3mb | 195 km NW of Lorengau, Papua New Guinea -0.972°, 145.870° | 10.0 km | - | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
Seismographs logged a magnitude 4.3 earthquake 195 km NW of Lorengau, Papua New Guinea with origin time 16:50 UTC on June 5, 2026. The event originated approximately 10.0 km below the surface, classifying it as shallow crustal. The event was offshore — common for earthquakes along subduction zones and transform plate boundaries. Geolocation places the event at -0.972°N, 145.870°E. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M4.3 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 16:40:39 UTC | 2.3ml | 4 km ESE of Adak, Alaska 51.862°, -176.579° | 12.3 km | - | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
Reports of a magnitude 2.3 earthquake 4 km ESE of Adak, Alaska came in on June 5, 2026 at 16:40 UTC. In the 72 hours after this event, the USGS recorded 7 smaller earthquakes within 20 km, consistent with an ongoing aftershock sequence rooted here. At a depth of 12.3 km, the event was shallow crustal. The epicenter is at 51.862°, -176.579°. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M2.3 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
2026-06-05 2026-06-05 16:34:36 UTC | 4.9mb | 33 km NE of Dharamsala, India 32.433°, 76.567° | 10.0 km | 99 | - | - | ✓ Reviewed | USGS → |
Reports of a magnitude 4.9 earthquake 33 km NE of Dharamsala, India came in on June 5, 2026 at 16:34 UTC. Of every earthquake currently listed for worldwide seismic activity, this one generated the most felt reports from the public. Nearby residents submitted 99 felt reports to the USGS DYFI platform. This was a shallow crustal earthquake, focused at 10.0 km depth. The event was offshore — common for earthquakes along subduction zones and transform plate boundaries. Geolocation places the event at 32.433°N, 76.567°E. The solution has been reviewed by a USGS seismologist and is considered finalized. See the M4.9 event page for the full report, ShakeMap, and citizen-reported intensity data. | ||||||||
Legend:
Mag: Magnitude ({magType} = ml, mb, mw, etc.)
Felt: Number of DYFI felt reports
MMI: Modified Mercalli Intensity (I-X+)
Alert: PAGER alert level
Depth: Shallow (<70km), Intermediate, Deep (>300km)
Status: Auto = preliminary, Reviewed = verified by seismologist
Click any row to see additional technical details.
About This Page
This page shows all earthquakes recorded by the USGS Earthquake Hazards Program during the 24-hour UTC period on June 5, 2026. Data includes all events of magnitude 1.0 or greater. Past earthquake data is considered final after review by USGS seismologists.