Seismologists have recorded a magnitude 4.8 earthquake in the Philippines, with the epicentre located 47 km SSW of Lumatil, Philippines. The event occurred at 05:14 UTC on Friday, June 12, 2026 and originated at a depth of 57.4 km.
Seismic Context for the Philippines
The Philippines archipelago sits at the meeting point of the Philippine Sea Plate, Eurasian Plate, and several smaller microplates. It lies squarely within the Pacific Ring of Fire and experiences some of the world's most intense seismic activity.
The Philippines has experienced numerous major earthquakes, including the 1990 Luzon earthquake (M7.8) and the 2019 Cotabato earthquakes. Metro Manila, built partly on soft lacustrine sediments of Laguna de Bay, is considered at significant risk in the event of a major Marikina Fault rupture.
About This Event
At a focal depth of 57.4 km, this is classified as a shallow earthquake (0–70 km). Shallow events are typically the most damaging: the seismic energy has less distance to travel before reaching the surface, resulting in stronger and more abrupt ground shaking at the epicentre.
In terms of felt effects, a magnitude 4.8 earthquake is typically felt strongly by everyone; minor to moderate damage possible in vulnerable buildings. Moderate earthquakes are felt by virtually everyone near the epicentre. Strong shaking lasting 10–30 seconds can topple unsecured items, crack plaster, and cause poorly anchored objects to fall. Aftershocks are common following moderate events.
Understanding the Magnitude Scale
Earthquake magnitude is measured on a logarithmic scale — meaning each whole-number increase corresponds to roughly 32 times more energy released and approximately 10 times greater ground motion amplitude. A magnitude 4.8 event therefore releases significantly more energy than its number alone might suggest to the casual observer.
A magnitude 4.8 earthquake releases approximately approximately 30,000 tonnes of TNT — comparable to the Hiroshima atomic bomb of energy. For comparison, this exceeds the energy released by most conventional explosive events and is sufficient to shift tectonic stress in measurable ways across a wide region.
Significant damage can occur to vulnerable structures — particularly unreinforced masonry, old adobe buildings, and poorly maintained older construction. Well-engineered modern buildings are designed to withstand this level of shaking with minimal structural impact, though contents may shift and non-structural elements (ceilings, partitions) can be damaged.
What to Do After an Earthquake
The internationally recommended action during earthquake shaking is Drop, Cover, and Hold On: drop to your hands and knees, take cover under a sturdy table or desk (or protect your head with your arms if no shelter is available), and hold on until shaking stops. Do not run outside during shaking — most injuries occur when people attempt to move.
Agree on an out-of-area contact that family members can reach if local communications are disrupted. Identify two meeting points: one near your home and one further away. Practise earthquake drills, especially with children and elderly household members.
Staying Informed
PHIVOLCS (Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology) monitors seismic activity and issues alerts. Residents should familiarise themselves with local contingency plans and safe building evacuation routes.
QuakeWatch publishes real-time earthquake data sourced from the USGS global catalog — covering every detected seismic event worldwide, 24 hours a day. Visit our live map to see this and all other recent earthquakes, or explore our guide to earthquake magnitude for a deeper understanding of what these numbers mean in practice.
Community Felt Reports
If you felt this earthquake, your experience contributes to an important scientific dataset. The USGS "Did You Feel It?" (DYFI) system and QuakeWatch's own community reports platform collect first-hand accounts of shaking intensity from people across the affected region. These reports — describing where people were, what they felt, and what moved or was damaged — help seismologists map shaking intensity across an area much larger than any single seismograph can cover. Visit the earthquake's detail page on our live map to submit your own report.
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