Written by on . Last updated April 19th, 2026.

In the South Pacific Ocean 156 kilometer from Kokopo, Papua New Guinea, a significant MAG-5.2 earthquake occurred in the night of Sunday April 5th, 2026.

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Earthquake Summary

This earthquake hit under water in the South Pacific Ocean, 62 kilometers (39 mi) off the coast of Papua New Guinea, 156 kilometer east of Kokopo in East New Britain. The center of this earthquake had an intermediate depth of 108 km.

Date and Time: Apr 5, 2026 02:23 (Port Moresby Time)
- Apr 4, 2026 16:23 Universal Time.
Location: 156 km east of Kokopo, East New Britain, Papua New Guinea.
Coordinates 4°35'32"S 153°39'0"E.
Map: Map of area around epicenter.
Map of area around epicenter. Click to open in Google Maps.
Magnitude: MAG 5.2
Detected by 23 stations. Maximum Error Range ±0.065 .
Depth: 108 km (67 mi)
An intermediate depth.
Tsunami Risk: Tsunami very unlikely
Earthquakes under MAG-6.5 at depths deeper than 100km are very unlikely to cause tsunami's.
Always stay cautious - More info here.

Nearby towns and cities

This earthquake may have been felt in Papua New Guinea . Kokopo in East New Britain, Papua New Guinea is the nearest significant place from the epicenter. The earthquake occurred 156 kilometer (97 mi) east of Kokopo.

Overview of nearby places

Distance Place
156 km (97 mi)
W from epicenter
Kokopo

East New Britain, Papua New Guinea.
280 km (174 mi)
SE from epicenter
Arawa

Bougainville, Papua New Guinea.
Cities and Towns around the epicenter of this earthquake.

Aftershocks detected

Since this main shock, 1 smaller aftershock was detected. A 4.8 magnitude earthquake hit 2 days later 4 km (2.4 mi) southwest of this earthquake.

Overview of foreshocks and aftershocks

Classification Magnitude When Where
Main Shock
This Earthquake
M 5.2 Apr 5, 2026 02:23
(Port Moresby Time)
-
Aftershock M 4.8 2 days later
Apr 6, 2026 18:27 (Port Moresby Time)
4 km (2.4 mi)
SW from Main Shock.
Detected MAG2.5+ earthquakes within within 100km (62 mi), that occurred in the three days before and after the main shock.

More earthquakes coming?

Aftershocks are usually at least 1 order of magnitude less strong than main shocks. The more time passes, the smaller the chance and likely strength of any potential aftershocks.

In only six percent of cases, significant earthquakes are followed by a larger main shock, making the current earthquake a foreshock. While the chance of this happening is not so large, it is adviced to maintain cautiousness in the hours and days following a major earthquake.

Read: How to Stay Safe during an Earthquake (cdc.gov).

Earthquakes like this happen often in the region

Earthquakes of this strength are very common in the region. This is the strongest earthquake to hit since March 29th, 2026, when a 5.4 magnitude earthquake hit 91 km (56 mi) further south. An even stronger magnitude 7.9 earthquake struck on January 22nd, 2017.

In total, 157 earthquakes with a magnitude of 5.2 or higher have been registered within 300km (186 mi) of this epicenter in the past 10 years. This comes down to an average of once every 23 days.

Tsunami very unlikely

DISCLAIMER: We strongly suggest to closely monitor advice from local authorities with regards to tsunami risks. Our analysis is based on automatically collected data from external sources, and these might contain mistakes. In addition, earthquakes can cause landslides that may lead to a tsunami, or be a followed by another, potentially stonger, earthquake.

For a serious tsunami to occur, earthquakes usually need to have a magnitude of at least 6.5 and occur at a shallow depth of maximum 100km. Neither are the case with this earthquake. However always stay cautious and monitor advice from local authorities.

Tsunami Risk Factors

Factor Under Sea? MAG-6.5 or stronger? Shallow depth?
Explanation Almost all tsunami's are caused by earthquakes with their epicenter under sea or very near the sea. However stay cautious in coastal areas as earthquakes on land may cause landslides into sea, potentially still causing a local tsunami. Under MAG 6.5: Very unlikely to cause a tsunami.
MAG 6.5 to 7.5: Destructive tsunami's do occur, but are uncommon. Likely to observe small sea level changes.
MAG 7.6+: Earthquakes with these magnitudes might produce destructive tsunami's.
Most destructive tsunami's are caused by shallow earthquakes with a depth between 0 and 100km under the surface of the earth. Deeper tsunami's are unlikely to displace to ocean floor.
This Earthquake This earthquake appears to have struck under the sea. Not this earthquake.
This earthquake had a magnitude of 5.2. Earthquakes of this strength are unlikely to trigger a tsunami.
Not this earthquake.
This earthquake occurred at a depth of 108 km (67 mi). Earthquakes this deep in the earth are unlikely to trigger a tsunami.

Sources

Last updated 19/04/26 01:28 (). As more information on this earthquake becomes available this article will be updated. This article is automatically composed based on data originating from multiple sources.

  1. US Geographic Society (USGS): Earthquake us6000smlm
  2. European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre (EMSC): Earthquake 20260404_0000387
  3. Geonames.org: World Cities Database
  4. Google Maps: Static API
  5. Earthquakelist.org: Historic Earthquakes Database

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