Darwin sits in tropical northern Australia, where a monsoonal climate produces a hot, wet season from roughly November through April and a dry season for the rest of the year, with cyclones posing the region’s biggest flood risk.
In Australia’s tropical Top End, the city faces cyclone risk each wet season, most notably the devastating Cyclone Tracy in 1974. Cyclones crossing this coast can dump extraordinary rainfall totals in a short time, and because they can intensify rapidly right up until landfall, the Bureau of Meteorology’s radar network is essential for tracking a storm’s exact position and rain bands in real time. Learn more: Hurricane Season Radar Guide · Open the full Rain Map