A predawn earthquake shook the area around Frazier Park early Sunday, sending tremors across a wide stretch of Southern California and triggering the region’s ShakeAlert system, though no injuries or damage were immediately reported.
An earthquake before sunrise
The U.S. Geological Survey recorded the quake at about 3:38 a.m. Sunday, with an epicenter roughly one mile southeast of Frazier Park in Kern County, at a depth of about 13 kilometers. Initial readings put the magnitude at 4.4, though the USGS later revised that figure down to 4.2 as seismologists reviewed additional data, a routine adjustment that often follows the first hours after a quake is detected.
Felt across two counties
Frazier Park sits roughly 45 miles south of Bakersfield, but the shaking reached well beyond the immediate area. The USGS received reports of light shaking from Bakersfield, Lamont and Tehachapi in Kern County, as well as from Pine Mountain Club, Santa Clarita, Lancaster and Palmdale in Los Angeles County. That spread illustrates how a moderate quake centered in a lightly populated stretch of Kern County can still register with residents across two heavily populated counties.
ShakeAlert activates, no damage reported
The region’s ShakeAlert early warning system activated in response to the quake, part of the broader USGS effort to give residents brief advance notice before shaking reaches them. As of Sunday morning, officials had not reported any injuries or structural damage tied to the earthquake, consistent with what would be expected from a quake of this magnitude and depth.
Aftershocks remain likely
Seismologists tracking the event have noted subsequent smaller quakes in the same area, which are typically aftershocks caused by minor adjustments along the section of fault that slipped during the initial earthquake. Aftershocks can continue for days, weeks or even years after a main quake, and officials caution that some aftershocks can occasionally match or exceed the magnitude of the initial event, particularly in already affected locations.
Putting the magnitude in context
Magnitude measures the energy released at an earthquake’s source and has largely replaced the older Richter scale in modern reporting. Quakes in the 2.5 to 5.4 range are commonly felt but rarely cause significant damage, while anything below 2.5 usually goes unnoticed by most people. The shake intensity from Sunday’s quake was categorized as weak to light across the affected area, based on the Modified Mercalli Intensity scale used by seismologists to describe how strongly the ground moves in a given location.
What to do if the shaking starts
Emergency officials continue to recommend the same basic response regardless of a quake’s size. Anyone indoors should stay put, avoid doorways and move away from windows, while drivers should pull over, stop and set the parking brake. People in bed are advised to turn face down and cover their head with a pillow. Standard guidance from officials remains to drop to the ground, take cover under sturdy furniture and hold on until the shaking stops, then stay alert for aftershocks, which commonly follow a main earthquake in the hours and days after.
For residents in Kern and Los Angeles counties, officials suggest this is a good moment to review earthquake preparedness basics, including making sure an emergency kit is stocked and accessible in case a larger quake follows.

