2025 Central Vietnam floods were a period of heavy rainfall and flooding that occurred in the central provinces of Vietnam from October 16, 2025, to 6 December. The event was caused by a combination of weather patterns, including a cold air mass, disturbances in the upper-level easterly winds, along with the influence of a low-pressure area formed from the remnants of Tropical Storm Fengshen, Typhoon Koto and the circulation of Typhoon Kalmaegi.
Prolonged heavy rainfall occurred across provinces from Quảng Trá» to Khánh Hòa, with two major phases. The first phase took place from October 16 to November 9. A record 24-hour rainfall in Vietnam was recorded in Bach Ma from 7:00PM (UTC+7) in October 26 to 7:00PM in October 27 at 1739.6mm, and total rainfall from 25 to 30 October in this weather station was recorded at 4.161mm. It raised heavy flooding in Vietnam, some stations in Hue and Da Nang recorded historical flood peak. On the Bá» River at Phú á»Âc, the flood peak exceeded the previous record set in 2020 three times within just one week.
As of November 5, 47 people were dead and eight others missing, with 130 others left injured. Damage in Da Nang was estimated at 837.312 billion dong (US$33.2 million), and in Quảng Ngãi province reached 1.924 trillion dong (US$76.32 million). In Lâm ÃÂá»Âng, damage by the flooding was estimated at 38 billion dong (US$1.5 million). Damage by flooding in Hue reached 3.27 trillion dong (US$129.7 million). As of November 13, at least 66 people are reported killed and missing following days of the first period of flooding and landslides, along with Typhoon Kalmaegi, in central Vietnam.
The second phase began on November 15, with the center of flooding shifting to the South Central Coast. The Ba river in ÃÂắk Lắk exceeded the historic flood peak, higher than the 1993 floods. In the second phase, at least 98 people are reported killed, 10 others missing and damage reached 14.352 trillion dong (US$571 million).