this post was submitted on 03 Apr 2025
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Outdated lightning safety advice is making the rounds again, prompting experts to speak up about what actually keeps you safe in a storm.

If you get caught outdoors during a lightning storm, safety experts once recommended adopting a crouched position to lessen your chances of being struck by lightning. It turns out, however, that the position doesn’t make you any safer.

“If you’re caught outside during a thunderstorm, the best plan of action is to move as fast as you can to a safer place,” John Jensenius, a lightning safety specialist with the NLSC, said in a statement released by Loehr Lightning Protection Co. “The sooner you get to a safe place, the lower your risk. Crouching only prolongs the risk of being struck,” explained Jensenius.

The crouch isn’t just outdated—it was debunked almost 20 years ago. But despite the fact that the NLSC and the National Weather Service stopped recommending the crouch in 2008, institutions such as the American Hiking Society and the city of Bellmead in Texas continue to include it in their lightning safety guidelines.

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[–] ptz@dubvee.org 13 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

Technically true, but there's other factors:

  1. Even if you're crouched, you may still be the tallest structure (e.g. you're in a big, open field).
  2. As the NLSC states, crouching prolongs the amount of time you're in danger with little benefit over running to safety (I suppose if there is no safety, it's better than nothing, and the CDC guidance does list this basically as a "last resort").
  3. Even if there's a taller structure near you (crouched or not), lightning causes electric currents along the top of the ground that can be deadly more than 100 feet away from the strike point.