Seismologists have recorded a magnitude 5.1 earthquake in Indonesia, with the epicentre located 118 km ESE of Bitung, Indonesia. The event occurred at 12:05 UTC on Saturday, June 13, 2026 and originated at a depth of 35.0 km.
Seismic Context for Indonesia
Indonesia is located on the Pacific Ring of Fire at the junction of multiple major tectonic plates, including the Indo-Australian, Eurasian, and Pacific plates. With over 17,000 islands along active fault lines and subduction zones, it is among the world's most earthquake-prone nations.
Indonesia experiences thousands of earthquakes each year. Major events in recent decades include the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami (M9.1–9.3), the 2006 Yogyakarta earthquake, and the 2018 Sulawesi earthquake and tsunami. The country has invested heavily in tsunami warning infrastructure since 2004.
About This Event
At a focal depth of 35.0 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 5.1 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 5.1 event therefore releases significantly more energy than its number alone might suggest to the casual observer.
A magnitude 5.1 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
Keep an earthquake emergency kit accessible at home. It should include at least 72 hours of water (4 litres per person per day), non-perishable food, a first aid kit, torch, battery-powered radio, copies of important documents, and essential medications. Reviewing and restocking this kit annually is strongly recommended.
If you are on or near a coast and experience strong or prolonged earthquake shaking, treat it as a potential tsunami warning and move immediately to high ground. Do not wait for an official alert — natural warning signs (severe shaking, unusual sea withdrawal) are your first alert.
Staying Informed
BMKG (Badan Meteorologi, Klimatologi, dan Geofisika) operates Indonesia's earthquake and tsunami warning system. Coastal communities should move to higher ground immediately after strong shaking without waiting for an official warning.
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.
How QuakeWatch Tracks This Event
QuakeWatch sources earthquake data directly from the USGS ComCat (Comprehensive Catalog), which aggregates data contributed by seismic networks worldwide including JMA (Japan), EMSC (Europe and Mediterranean), GFZ (Germany and global), Geoscience Australia, and dozens of national and regional networks. This data is refreshed every 60 seconds, ensuring that new earthquakes appear on our live map within minutes of being processed by the USGS. You can also submit a felt report for this earthquake directly on its detail page.
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