At least four people were killed across Kentucky on Saturday after heavy rains pushed rivers over their banks, swallowed roads, and sent floodwaters rushing into homes. Gov. Andy Beshear declared a state of emergency in Kentucky and urged residents to stay off the roads as rescue teams worked through the afternoon and into the night across multiple counties.
Three of the deaths occurred in Madison County, near Lexington, Kentucky. Two people, a man and a woman, drowned in the basement of a home that was already fully submerged by the time police and fire officials arrived. Rescue teams forced their way inside but found no survivors. A third Madison County resident died after being swept away in a vehicle by flash flooding. A fourth person died in neighboring Jackson County.
Beshear told reporters the state had already lost several residents to the storms and made clear that preventing further deaths was the only priority driving every decision being made on the ground.
A flooding crisis that arrived fast and hit hard
Some areas of Kentucky received six to seven inches of rain in a matter of hours Saturday morning, far more than the ground could absorb. Roads across at least 12 locations became impassable, and several bridges in Jessamine County were wiped out entirely. Search and rescue teams, state police, and swift water rescue units fanned out across communities responding to calls from residents trapped in homes and vehicles.
Madison County was among the hardest hit. Major intersections in Richmond, about 30 miles south of Lexington, went underwater. Richmond Mayor Robert Blythe said he spent much of the day fielding calls from residents worried about neighbors whose homes were filling with water. The city, he noted, had largely avoided the kind of catastrophic flooding that struck surrounding areas in recent years, but Saturday made clear that streak had ended.
A video circulating on social media showed the Million Church in Richmond having partially collapsed, surrounded by standing water. The church had announced earlier in the day that its Saturday service was canceled because of the storm.
Dam concerns in Bullitt County
In Bullitt County, south of Louisville, officials ordered precautionary evacuations along Cedar Springs Drive in Lebanon Junction after a dam at the Rod and Gun Club showed signs of severe erosion. A portion of the embankment gave way in a landslide, sending a mix of soil and water into the club and its parking lot.
Corey Farris, deputy director of Bullitt County Emergency Management, described widespread flooding that had triggered multiple road closures and required rescues from partially submerged vehicles and homes across the county. By late afternoon, emergency management officials said the dam was holding and showed no signs of imminent failure, but crews continued monitoring conditions closely as another round of storms approached. Five counties, including Bullitt, Madison, Meade, Mercer, and Spencer, declared local states of emergency.
In Spencer County, a vehicle became stranded in floodwaters and was eventually swept away by the current. Debris buildup beneath bridges near Plum Ridge Road damaged the roadway and forced closures through at least Monday. In Louisville, officials shut down Lower River Road as Valley Station reported rising water.
Second storm raises the stakes
As night approached, forecasters warned that additional heavy rainfall was on the way, with some areas expected to see continued storms through 11 p.m. Western Kentucky faced added threats from damaging winds, hail, and the possibility of tornadoes, with Bowling Green, Henderson, and Paducah among the cities at highest risk.
Beshear was unambiguous in his warnings to residents. Conditions after dark, he said, would be significantly more dangerous than anything the state had already seen that day, and anyone who could avoid driving should stay home entirely. Emergency officials in Bullitt and Spencer counties echoed that position, urging drivers to treat any flooded road as one that cannot be crossed.
Kentucky has absorbed repeated rounds of catastrophic flooding in recent years. More than a month’s worth of rain fell across much of the state in under 24 hours during early 2025. In 2022, flooding of historic proportions killed dozens and destroyed homes from the inside out. Saturday’s storms added new names to a toll the state has been counting for years.

