Extreme weather in Northland: Up to 780% of normal rain recorded near Ōakura
A Northland hydrology report has detailed the devastating extreme rainfall in January which caused flooding and slips.
The heavy rainfall began with a severe thunderstorm on January 18, concentrated on Northland’s east coast from Whangaruru to Ngunguru.
The coastal settlement of Ōakura, in particular, was shattered by flooding and slips, with six buildings – including the community hall – being red-stickered.
The heavy rain continued through the week, including a widespread storm on January 21. The same weather system proved deadly in the Bay of Plenty.
The storm caused evacuations, flooding and slips in Northland, again devastating the coast northeast from Whangārei.
The key road to the community, Russell Rd, remains closed by a large slip on Helena Bay hill and is not expected to reopen until May or June.
Northland Regional Council’s hydrology report for January has now put the extreme weather into perspective, measuring an average of 232mm of rain across the region, which is 299% of the long-term average for the month.
But the rain did not fall evenly across the region, instead dumping along the east coast.
The highest rainfall total measured by the regional council was recorded at Punaruku, at Otetao Reti Marae, near Ōakura.
It recorded 608mm of rain, which is 781% of what is normally expected for the month.

The same site recorded 285.5mm in just 24 hours, from 11.30am on Saturday, January 17 – a whole summer’s worth of rainfall in just one day.
Other rainfall stations with very high recordings in January were:
- Ngunguru at Dugmores Rock with 511.5mm, 619% of normal
- Whakapara at Puhipuhi: 466mm, 567% of normal
- Hatea at Glenbervie Forest: 461.5mm, 480% of normal
- Towai at Weta (north-east of Kāeo): 405.5mm, 407% of normal
- Hakaru at Tara (inland Mangawhai): 358mm, 398% of normal.
Even the Northland site with the least rain in January – Kaipara’s Pouto Point – had 90.5mm, which is 199% of what is normally expected for the month.
Using climate forecasting from Earth Sciences NZ for February to April, the council report warned the risk of weather systems connected to the tropics and subtropics increases.
This could lead to more “significant rainfall events” as the season goes on, it warned.

Temperatures are most likely to be warmer than normal and rainfall totals are most likely to be above normal, with both having a 50% chance.
Weather systems linked to subtropics or tropics may bring heavy rainfall, the report warned.
The tropical cyclone outlook from Earth Sciences and MetService also forecast a normal-to-elevated risk of cyclones for northern New Zealand for the season, which runs November 2025 to April 2026.
This means one to two ex-tropical cyclones are likely.
The good news from this report is, with normal-to-high groundwater levels, river flows and soil moisture levels for this time of year, there is a low risk of drought conditions developing in Northland over the next three months.
Denise Piper is a news reporter for the Northern Advocate, focusing on health and business. She has more than 20 years in journalism and is passionate about covering stories that make a difference.