Floods in Romania kill three, hundreds evacuated

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

Emergency personnel work near a destroyed vehicle in a flooded area of the town of Brosteni in Suceava county, Romania, in this handout image released on July 28, 2025. Romanian General Inspectorate for Emergency Situations/Handout via REUTERS

In eastern Romania's Neamt and Suceava counties, two rivers burst their banks, killing a 66-year-old man.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Follow topic:
  • Eastern Romania floods killed three elderly people, damaged thousands of homes, and prompted hundreds of evacuations across nine counties.
  • Neamt and Suceava counties were worst hit; rising rivers caused deaths in Brosteni where access was blocked.
  • Rescue workers used helicopters and excavators; the Environment Ministry reported record high river levels, and bridge repairs began.

AI generated

BUCHAREST - Severe overnight floods in eastern Romania killed three elderly people and damaged thousands of homes, with hundreds of people evacuated and four helicopters searching for stranded villagers, officials said on July 28.

Some 25 villages across nine counties were affected by heavy rain and high winds, which tore off roofs and uprooted trees, blocking traffic on some national roads, according to the emergency response agency.

It released footage showing wooden houses and cars swept away by the floodwaters, with rescue workers checking vehicles for potential victims.

The worst hit were Neamt and Suceava counties in eastern Romania, where two rivers burst their banks, killing a 66-year-old man and forcing hundreds of people to evacuate. All access roads to the village of Brosteni in Suceava county were blocked.

The emergency response agency later said that two women, an 85- and an 83-year-old, were also victims of the flood. Firefighters had to use an excavator to retrieve one of the bodies from a riverbed.

The Environment Ministry’s water management agency said some rivers rose to record high water levels. Repair works on collapsed bridges were under way, it said. REUTERS

A flood-affected area in the town of Brosteni, in Romania's Suceava county, on July 28.

PHOTO: REUTERS

See more on