A weekend of wild weather has drenched large swathes of Australia as most states brace for severe thunderstorms, strong winds and flash flooding. 

Six states and territories are on weather watch with storms forecast for Tasmania, Victoria, Queensland and Western Australia which are also set to develop across NSW and the ACT.

Intense and heavy rain blanketed larges swathes of Queensland on Sunday with the Bureau of Meteorology issuing flood watches for the south-east regions and surrounding catchments. 

Wild weather havoc stretched right down Australia east coast, with heavy downpours causing washouts on day one of the Australian Open tennis grand slam in Melbourne as players and spectators ducked for cover.

Storms will likely bring heavy, locally intense rainfall to parts of the North West Coast and Central Plateau areas of Tasmania, lead to dangerous and life-threatening flash flooding through Sunday afternoon.

In Victoria, strong winds and flash flooding are possible with thunderstorms in the central and eastern regions.

Winds of almost 100km/h were recorded at East Sale Airport on Sunday afternoon. 

In Queensland’s south-east, minor flood warnings are in place for the Bremer River and Warrill Creek, Burrum River and Mary River, while a flood warning has been issued for the Logan River.

A heavy downpour refused the dampen spirits at the Australian Open on Sunday

Larges swathes Australia’s east coast from Far North Queensland right down to Tasmania will cop another soaking on Monday

Wind gusts of 106km/h were observed at Hughenden on Sunday afternoon. 

Residents took to social media to post videos of flooding across roads and in the centre of towns in the South Burnett region.

‘We’ve got broad risks of severe thunderstorms stretching all the way from Townsville down to Brisbane,’ senior meteorologist Angus Hines told AAP.

‘Another very active day likely to bring some further weather impact, flash flooding, road closures, possible damage to trees, property, crops, as well as potential for power outages.’

Mr Hines said while the central Queensland coast had the highest flood risk, the risk for all other regions should not be downplayed.

‘Flash flooding would happen very quickly if further rainfall fell in those places because of how wet it has been – the ground can’t really soak up a lot more rain,’ he said.

The bureau forecasts showers and storms to continue into the week, and although the intensity is expected to come down a couple of notches, severe weather remains a risk into Wednesday.

Queensland has copped the brunt of the wild weather in recent days. Pictured is a car driving through large puddles as a result of heavy rainfall in Brisbane on Saturday

Perth 

Monday: Partly cloudy.Min19 Max29 

Tuesday: Cloud clearing.Min18 Max26

Wednesday: Sunny. Min15 Max29

Thursday: Sunny. Min 19 Max38

Adelaide

Monday: Sunny. Min19 Max31

Tuesday: Sunny. Min17 Max32

Wednesday: Possible shower.Min19 Max26

Thursday: Partly cloudy. Min15 Max25

Melbourne 

Monday: Partly cloudy. Min19 Max27

Tuesday: Partly cloudy. Min17 Max28

Wednesday: Shower or two. Min19 Max28

Thursday: Shower or two. Min15 Max22

Hobart

Monday: Possible shower.Min17Max22

Tuesday: Cloudy. Min15 Max21

Wednesday: Showers increasing. Min15 Max25

Thursday: Possible shower. Min15 Max23

Canberra 

Monday: Possible storm. Min14 Max31

Tuesday: Possible shower or storm. Min15 Max31

Wednesday: Showers. Possible storm. Min15 Max33

Thursday: Possible shower. Min15 Max26

Spectators were seen ducking for cover on day one of Australian Open in Melbourne

Sydney 

Monday: Partly cloudy. Min21 Max30

Tuesday: Partly cloudy. Min21 Max29

Wednesday: Shower or two. Possible storm. Min22 Max31

Thursday: Shower or two. Min21 Max26

Brisbane 

Monday: Shower or two. Possible storm. Min21 Max29

Tuesday: Possible shower.Min21 Max31

Wednesday: Mostly sunny. Min22 Max31

Thursday: Shower or two. Min22 Max 33



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