This post will be frequently updated in the next 24 hours with live video stream footage. For the latest visit the official advisories.
Live Streams

Summary
#Ian made landfall at 3:05 p.m. as a Cat 4 with 150 mph winds, tying as the 5th-strongest contiguous U.S. landfall on record. The latest from Bob Henson and myself: https://t.co/3BJDhX8ili
— Jeff Masters (@DrJeffMasters) September 28, 2022
Advisories
Tweets
Powerful winds in Englewood, Florida.
— Moshe Schwartz (@YWNReporter) September 28, 2022
Hurricane #Ian pic.twitter.com/254F7a3OO4
Second video from Horizons in Bonita Bay pic.twitter.com/CRTXnPKNAr
— Chris (@ChrisBCary) September 28, 2022
⚠️ Horrific scene in Matlacha/Pine Island, Florida where storm surge and strong Cat 4 winds from #HurricaneIan has battered the small island community. pic.twitter.com/cdmKQLjYd5
— Alejandro Galiano ❁ (@havanahistory) September 28, 2022
Houses are destroyed and some are floating away as Ian's eyewall hammers southwest Florida. This is video from Fort Myers Beach, Florida off Estero Blvd by Loni Architects pic.twitter.com/6GqrxLRv9Q
— Kaitlin Wright (@wxkaitlin) September 28, 2022
Catastrophic flooding in Fort Myers Beach, Florida, from Hurricane #Ian.
— Moshe Schwartz (@YWNReporter) September 28, 2022
Note the nearly submerged pickup. pic.twitter.com/6h8k9VdPFH
En Florida la cosa está fea con el huracán 🌀 IAN.#florida #huracanian pic.twitter.com/aaXYvwbP54
— Pacheco Gadget (@pachecogadget) September 28, 2022
As Hurricane Ian moves ashore, streets in Naples Florida are quickly filling up with water. The National Hurricane Center said Wednesday morning that some area could see as many as 18 feet of storm surge. #linkinbio #hurricaneian #ian #hurricane #florida pic.twitter.com/XgZICVNi37
— LX News (@NBCLX) September 28, 2022
The storm surge is so powerful from #HurricaneIan that it has brought a shark into the city streets of Fort Myers.
— Colin McCarthy (@US_Stormwatch) September 28, 2022
🎥@BradHabuda pic.twitter.com/RHY0kK5RHR
#BREAKING: Video circulating shows houses FLOATING off their foundations in Fort Myers Beach. Hurricane #Ian. pic.twitter.com/OID6YATFd3
— Moshe Schwartz (@YWNReporter) September 28, 2022
#GOESEast captured this incredible view of the inside of #Hurricane #Ian's eye as the storm approached Florida.
— NOAA Satellites (@NOAASatellites) September 28, 2022
Latest: https://t.co/FYrreOueMf#FLwx pic.twitter.com/ulAYnrtw9z
Downtown Ft Myers right now 😳😳😳🌊🌊🌀🌀#ianpic.twitter.com/P7jXLMswng
— Ryan RC Rea (@volvoshine) September 28, 2022
Here’s a video of the eyewall making it’s way onshore now. This is @lanikairesort off Estero Blvd on Fort Myers Beach #HurricaneIan pic.twitter.com/URthVR8M3c
— Andrea Henderson (@AndreaNBC4) September 28, 2022
Integrated Kinetic Energy (in TJ) for hurricanes at landfall (via RMS and Brian McNoldy):
— Jeff Masters (@DrJeffMasters) September 28, 2022
Isabel (2003): 173
Sandy (2012): 141
Katrina (2005): 121
Wilma (2005): 103
Hugo (1985): 94
Ivan (2004): 81#Ian (2022): 47
Ida (2021): 47
Laura (2020): 21
Andrew (1992): 20
Charley (2004): 7 https://t.co/LRQDiu7CXv
#HurricaneIan looking fierce on the wind map pic.twitter.com/wV2zX7xGuH
— Moody Booty (@Brontophiliac) September 28, 2022
Video from Matt Tilman of Bayshore Blvd in Tampa. The bay being sucked out. #hurricaneian #ian pic.twitter.com/F54Lv1r5KV
— Jordan Steele (@JordanSteele) September 28, 2022
Check it out. The 53rd Weather Reconnaissance Squadron flew a mission into #HurricaneIan … https://t.co/XgxoA0oDKN #AirForce pic.twitter.com/cSIzXlLMfn
— DVIDSHub (@DVIDSHub) September 28, 2022
#Ian is now at 155 mph, 1 mph shy of a cat 5. Only 4 US storms have made landfall that strong. It may be taking a similar track to Charley, but it’s no Charley. Ian’s eye is 40mi wide, hurricane winds are 75mi wide. Dwarfs Charley’s 5 mi eye & 30mi hurr winds. @WFLA 1/ pic.twitter.com/iTuZfB8bwj
— Jeff Berardelli (@WeatherProf) September 28, 2022
Still 4 hours from high tide,the strom surge is astonishing! #keywest #HurricanIan #Ian 🌀 pic.twitter.com/9xR6xxElYR
— Rohit Sharma (@DcWalaDesi) September 28, 2022
#Ian now has 155 mph winds, just shy of Cat 5 status. This could be one of the strongest hurricanes in SW FL history. Storm surge will be catastrophic for the Fort Myers area (12 to 16 feet).
— Emily Sutton (@emilyrsutton) September 28, 2022
7AM CT WED #flwx #PrayforFlorida pic.twitter.com/aRBNXofXAC
#HurricaneIan has rapidly intensified overnight & now has maximum sustained winds of 155 mph. Only 4 #hurricanes on record have made continental US landfall w/ max winds of 155+ mph:
— Philip Klotzbach (@philklotzbach) September 28, 2022
Labor Day (1935): 185 mph
Camille (1969): 175 mph
Andrew (1992): 165 mph
Michael (2018): 160 mph pic.twitter.com/Z7YGc83Fvo
Cuba
BBC: Hurricane Ian: Cuba suffers complete blackout after storm
Related
What are the links between hurricanes and climate change? For one, it's making them stronger, more dangerous.@NBC6 Hurricane Specialist @JohnMoralesTV talked with me about the connections and their influence on #HurricaneIan for @NBCLX pic.twitter.com/WcXLQfiMZD
— Chase Cain (@ChaseCainNBC) September 27, 2022
Teaser image by Climate State, released under creative commons universal.