A large, violent tornado touched down south of Kankakee on the evening of 10 March 2026, tearing through the Kankakee Fairgrounds, crossing the Kankakee River into Aroma Park, and continuing into northwest Indiana. Homes were destroyed, more than 7,000 customers lost power, fires broke out along the storm's path and an emergency declaration was filed with the State of Illinois before midnight.
At approximately 6:19 p.m. on Tuesday, 10 March 2026, the Kankakee County Sheriff's Office identified a tornado on the ground near the Kankakee County Fairgrounds. Within minutes, the National Weather Service in Chicago issued warnings confirming a large tornado was on the ground and moving northeast toward Aroma Park. The twister followed a path that crossed the Kankakee River before continuing toward Momence and ultimately crossing the state line into northwest Indiana, where it struck Lake Village in Newton County directly.
The Illinois State Police described major damage on the south side of Kankakee City. The sheriff's office reported extensive damage throughout the affected area, with homes partially collapsed, roofs torn away, walls brought down, and debris scattered across roads and residential areas. Multiple fires broke out along the storm's path. By 8:30 p.m., the city confirmed all fires were under control and only minor injuries to residents had been reported, a remarkably low casualty count given the scale of structural destruction. The Kankakee County Sheriff's Office confirmed zero deaths and no serious injuries as of 10:30 p.m.
Dow Futures Fall Amid Inflation and Middle East War FearsAccording to Wikipedia's overview of US tornado activity, March tornadoes affecting the greater Chicago metro area are historically uncommon but not unprecedented, with the region typically seeing its peak severe weather season in May and June. The 10 March 2026 event arrived weeks ahead of the normal severe weather window, driven by an unusually warm air mass colliding with colder air to the north. Forecasters had warned for 24 hours that the collision would produce conditions capable of intense tornadoes, damaging winds and giant hail across a corridor stretching from Texas to Michigan.
The Kankakee tornado was the most significant touchdown in that corridor. It was confirmed as a stovepipe tornado, a visually distinct, narrow-column formation, spotted near the Kankakee Airport before tracking northeast. An image shared from Aroma Park showed a home with its roof partially torn off, walls collapsed and furniture scattered outside. The sheriff's office described the Aroma Park damage as extensive. Route 45/52 was closed from River Road to Exit 308 of Interstate 57 due to a combination of downed power lines, fire damage and debris. The 911 centre was described as overwhelmed with emergency calls.
The tornado was accompanied by the largest hail reported in Illinois in recent memory. A storm chaser reported a hailstone measuring 5.2 inches in diameter just southwest of Kankakee. If confirmed by the National Weather Service, that measurement would set a new Illinois state record. CBS News Chicago meteorologist David Yeomans said the reading might indeed be a record for the state. Softball-sized hail, typically around 4 to 4.5 inches, was confirmed across Kankakee County. Golf ball-sized hail fell in Bolingbrook, Woodridge, Downers Grove and Darien in the southwest suburbs. Tennis ball-sized hail was reported near Pontiac and Romeoville.
The hail shattered vehicle windows across the affected area. A photo circulated on social media showed a car in West Kankakee with its rear window entirely smashed out. The combination of tornado winds, golf ball to softball-sized hail and wind gusts of up to 70 miles per hour made the storm one of the most destructive single-day severe weather events the Kankakee area had experienced in years. CBS News Chicago Chief Meteorologist Albert Ramon described the overall severe weather risk level as among the highest seen in several years.
The response to the tornado was swift. Kankakee County Sheriff Mike Downey, County Board Chairman Matthew Alexander-Hildebrand and Mayor Chris Curtis jointly activated the Emergency Operations Center and filed an emergency disaster declaration with the State of Illinois the same night. The declaration is a necessary step for accessing state and potentially federal disaster assistance funding for the recovery effort. Sheriff Downey was scheduled to hold a press conference the following morning to provide a full update on storm impacts and damage assessments.
The BBC reported that the storm was part of a broader severe weather outbreak affecting the Midwest and southern Plains, with tornado watches in effect across states from Texas to Michigan. The American Red Cross opened a shelter at Kankakee Community College for those unable to return to damaged homes. In Indiana, North Newton Junior High School in Newton County was opened as an emergency shelter for Lake Village residents displaced by the destruction. Fire officials in Lake Township advised all drivers to stay out of the Lake Village area entirely as crews worked to clear debris and assess structural safety.
| Category | Detail | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Deaths (Kankakee County) | Zero confirmed as of 10:30 p.m. | None confirmed |
| Injuries (Kankakee) | Minor injuries only to city residents | Minor only |
| Injuries (Newton Co., Indiana) | Confirmed by Indiana State Police; count unknown | Ongoing assessment |
| Power outages | 7,000+ customers in Kankakee County; tens of thousands broader region | Ongoing |
| Homes destroyed | Multiple in Lake Village, Indiana; partial collapses in Aroma Park | Confirmed |
| Road closures | Route 45/52 closed River Road to I-57 Exit 308; multiple local roads | Active closures |
| Fires | Multiple fires along storm path in Kankakee | All under control by 8:30 p.m. |
| Emergency declaration | Filed with State of Illinois by county and city officials | Filed |
| Hail record | 5.2-inch hailstone reported; potential Illinois state record | Pending NWS confirmation |
Kankakee County Sheriff Mike Downey was scheduled to hold a press conference at 8:00 a.m. local time on 11 March 2026 to provide a full assessment of storm impacts, including damage totals, any updated injury counts from Indiana, and the state of the ongoing search and rescue efforts in Aroma Park and surrounding communities. The emergency declaration filed with the State of Illinois opens the path toward state disaster assistance funding, and potentially, a request for a federal disaster declaration if damage assessments warrant it.
Power restoration across the affected area was expected to take at least several days in the hardest-hit zones, where not only lines were down but utility poles and transformers were damaged or destroyed. The National Weather Service will conduct damage surveys in the days following the event to assign a formal EF rating to the Kankakee tornado, which will determine its official classification in the historical record. Given the structural damage to homes and the size and track of the confirmed stovepipe tornado, an EF-2 or higher rating is expected by local meteorologists.
For now, the immediate priority for emergency crews remains the same as it was overnight: account for every resident in the affected areas, clear roads of debris and live wires, restore power, and ensure no one is trapped in damaged structures. The longer rebuilding process, for homeowners whose roofs and walls came down in Aroma Park and for families whose houses were destroyed in Lake Village, is only just beginning.
