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Flooding brings disruption to Scotland amid heavy rainfall

Heavy rain and melting snow have triggered 19 SEPA flood warnings and major road closures across Scotland, with A92 and the A9 among routes affected and a Met Office yellow warning in force.

DPA LIFE
Published January 12,2026
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Flooding has brought disruption in some parts of Scotland, with flood warnings in place in many areas due to heavy rain and melting snow.

As of Monday morning, there were 19 Scottish Environment Protection Agency (SEPA) flood warnings and 12 flood alerts in place around the country.

In Aberdeenshire, the A92 road was closed in both directions due to flooding, as was the A9 at Blair Atholl in Perth and Kinross.

A Met Office yellow warning of rain for much of north-west Scotland is in place until 10 am (1000 GMT) on Monday while a warning of wind expired at 8 am.

The heavy rain comes after a week of wintry weather in northern Scotland which saw hundreds of schools closed throughout the first week of the new term.

Aberdeenshire Council last week declared a major incident over the the weather situation, but on Sunday evening announced the incident was over.

The Scottish GOVERNMENT REsilience room met for the seventh day in a row on Sunday, where they and partner agencies discussed how to respond to the harsh weather conditions affecting the country.

The meeting heard that Highland schools are expected to return on Monday and Aberdeenshire Council said many of its schools and health care services would reopen.

Authorities have urged people to be vigilant due to the weather conditions on Monday.

David Morgan, SEPA's flood duty manager, said: "Continuing heavy rain, combined with melting snow, increases the risk of flooding.

"Flood risk is greatest in Dumfries and Galloway and the west and north of Scotland.

"Possible impacts could include flooding affecting parts of communities, low-lying land, transport infrastructure and individual properties.

"Driving conditions will be very difficult at times."

Justice Secretary Angela Constance, who hosted the meeting alongside First Minister John Swinney, said: "As wintry conditions ease across the country, we are urging the public to remain vigilant.

"Rising temperatures and heavy rainfall, combined with melting snow, bring a significant risk of flooding in several areas.

"This could affect properties and transport routes, with difficult driving conditions expected in many parts of the country at the start of the working week.

"Ministers have now met in the Scottish government resilience room for seven consecutive days, bringing together partners including SEPA, the Met Office, Police Scotland and local responders to ensure our response is co-ordinated.

"Agencies are working around the clock to support communities as the conditions change.

"I would encourage everyone to keep a close eye on weather forecasts, flood alerts and travel advice for their area over the coming days.

"Please follow the updates from key agencies including the Met Office, Sepa and Police Scotland."

The Met Office yellow warning of rain predicts that heavy rain and snow melt will bring the possibility of some flooding.

Matthew Lehnert, chief meteorologist for the Met Office, said: "While the wintry weather may have come to an end, the significant snow accumulations in parts of Scotland mixed with heavy rainfall and an increase in temperatures bring a risk of flooding in some areas as the snow melts.

"Keep up to date with the flood warnings issued by Sepa and check your flood risk."

Over the weekend, road closures and public transport cancellations were rife as a result of the snow, wind, rain and icy conditions.

Among routes affected was the A83 at the Rest and Be Thankful in Argyll and Bute.

Bear Scotland said a decision will be made about returning traffic to the A83 trunk road by midday on Monday, following a hillside inspection and subject to the forecast improving.