EARTH · RIVERS & FLOODS · BRAZIL

Amazon River Discharge

The latest reading on the Amazon at Óbidos, Brazil — from the Copernicus GloFAS model, reporting river discharge (cubic metres per second). By far the largest river on Earth by discharge — it carries more water to the sea than the next several biggest rivers combined.The figure below is live, shown with the time it was taken, and framed as a measurement of flow — never a flood verdict.

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What this reading means

River dischargeis the volume of water passing this point each second, in cubic metres per second (m³/s) — the standard way hydrologists size a river. GloFAS estimates it by routing rainfall and snowmelt down the whole basin. On the probe, the Amazon here read about 211,348 m³/s (very high flow); the live figure above will differ with the season. It is a measure of how big the river is running — not a statement that it is flooding, which depends on the river’s own banks downstream.

About this reading

SOURCECopernicus GloFAS
LOCATIONÓbidos, Brazil
REPORTSDischarge · daily

The Amazon’s discharge is estimated by the Copernicus Global Flood Awareness System (GloFAS), served keyless via the Open-Meteo Flood API. The point used here is the river’s verified main-stem cell near Óbidos, Brazil— chosen so the reading tracks the trunk of the river rather than a side channel — and the model updates daily.

Nearby rivers

The closest rivers to the Amazon— compare how much water each is moving.

See it in context