Live Status · Updated May 25, 2026
Kīlauea status, live from the summit
A single-page answer to "what is Kīlauea doing right now?" — current eruption state, official USGS alert level, aviation color code, and three live webcams from inside Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park. Pulled directly from the U.S. Geological Survey Hawaiian Volcano Observatory and refreshed every hour.
Live Kīlauea webcams
Official USGS live streams from the summit. Lava is most visible after dark.
Kīlauea summit · Halemaʻumaʻu crater
USGS live view of the summit caldera and active vent area.
Kīlauea summit · wide angle
Wide thermal/visual view of the eruption zone, updated 24/7.
Kīlauea · alternate vent view
Secondary USGS live stream focused on the active vents.
What does the current status actually mean?
Since December 2024, Kīlauea has been in an ongoing summit eruption made up of distinct episodes. An episode is a burst of active lava fountaining inside Halemaʻumaʻu crater that usually lasts several hours to a couple of days, followed by a multi-day pause of little or no visible lava. USGS numbers each one — Episode 1, Episode 2, and so on — and the pattern has been roughly one new episode every one to two weeks.
When the panel above says "not flowing right now", Kīlauea is in one of those between-episode pauses. The eruption hasn't ended; the next episode could start within days. The summit glow inside the crater is often still visible at night even during a pause.
The Watch alert level and Orange aviation color code reflect the ongoing eruption as a whole, not whether lava is actively fountaining in this exact hour. That's why those values rarely change day-to-day — they're describing the longer state of the volcano, while the eruption-activity line above describes what's happening right now.
Quick answers about the live status
What is a Kīlauea eruption episode?
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How often is the status on this page updated?
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What's the difference between the alert level and the aviation color code?
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Can I tell from this page when the next episode will start?
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Where are the live webcams pointing?
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Does Kīlauea activity affect flights to Hawaiʻi?
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Planning a visit?
Read the full Kīlauea guide
This page is the live data feed. The guide covers what an eruption at Kīlauea actually looks like in 2026, the best overlooks for viewing, how to handle vog and night driving, and how a private chauffeured day from Kona compares to self-driving.
Open the Kīlauea guideData source: USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory. Webcams are official USGS YouTube live streams.
