View of a stormy beach with strong winds bending palm trees. Waves crash near a rock formation by a pool. Cloudy sky and rain create a hazy atmosphere. Time and date displayed in the corner: October 9, 2024, 01:18 PM. Location: Fort Myers Beach.

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View of a stormy beach with strong winds bending palm trees. Waves crash near a rock formation by a pool. Cloudy sky and rain create a hazy atmosphere. Time and date displayed in the corner: October 9, 2024, 01:18 PM. Location: Fort Myers Beach.
A still image from a webcam showing Fort Myers beach today.

Multiple live streaming webcams are positioned across Florida where Hurricane Milton is expected to make landfall in the next few hours.

PetaPixel has rounded up webcams from across the web and embedded them on this page. Some of the feeds might go down as a result of Milton which is being called a “once in a century” hurricane by the Associated Press.

Port Tampa (Tampa Marriott Water Street)

North Fort Myers Neighborhood – Storm Surge Cam

Reed Timmer

Various Around Florida Including Tampa Bay, Key West, and Fort Myers Beach

Traffic Cameras Around Florida – AP Feed

Jacksonville Beach Pier

Clearwater Beach (Hilton Clearwater)

Clearwater Bay (Jimmy’s Crows Nest)

Caloosachatchee River Bridge, Fort Myers

Fort Myers, Naples and Englewood

Everglades City

The University of Tampa – Riverfront Webcam

Port Canaveral (Kennedy Space Center)

Various Webcams in Florida

Landfall is expected late Wednesday or the early hours of Thursday when it is forecast to bring flash flooding, storm surges of up to 15 feet, and powerful winds that will tear apart homes and rip trees from their roots.

The category 4 hurricane could bring widespread destruction to Florida which has avoided direct hits for more than a century, according to the Associated Press.

Fifteen Florida counties, home to approximately seven million people, were under mandatory evacuation orders as of Wednesday morning. Officials are warning residents to take precautionary measures.

Milton is forecast to cross central Florida and dump as much as 18 inches (46 centimeters) of rain as it heads toward the Atlantic Ocean. If that path is correct then it would largely spare other states ravaged by Helene, which killed at least 230 people on its path from Florida to the Carolinas.

Hurricane Milton is churning toward Florida’s west coast. The Tampa Bay area, home to more than 3.3 million people, is facing the possibility of widespread destruction after avoiding direct hits from major hurricanes for more than a century.

Despite the danger, some people have been taking selfies at the Southernmost Point Buoy in Key West today — a tourist attraction that claims to be the southernmost point in the continental U.S. — as online viewers watch on in horror.


Update 10/10: Added live streams.

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