An EF-0 tornado touched down on Naperville's east side last Thursday evening, cutting a 1.3-mile path through two neighborhoods and an apartment complex.

National Weather Service confirmed the tornado hit the ground at 8:04 p.m. near Gartner Road and Olesen Drive on June 11, then tracked northeast through the Huntington Hills and Olesen Estates neighborhoods, snapping and uprooting trees along a path 50 to 75 yards wide.

After crossing Naper Boulevard, the damage swath widened to roughly 150 yards as the storm passed over Huntington Apartments, where the NWS documented "extensive tree damage." It lifted just west of Benedictine Parkway after about two minutes on the ground.

Peak winds reached approximately 80 mph. An EF-0 rating, the lowest on the Enhanced Fujita Scale, covers tornadoes with winds between 65 and 85 mph.

The Naperville twister was one of 17 tornadoes NWS Chicago confirmed across its service area for June 11. The agency labeled the broader event a "Tornado Outbreak, Including Multiple Strong Tornadoes Across Northern Illinois and Northwest Indiana" on its official event page, published Sunday, June 14.

NWS Chicago said on X that additional damage analysis will continue through the week of June 15.

The June 11 storm system knocked out power to roughly 380,000 customers across Illinois and Indiana, according to Insurance Journal.

A separate severe storm the night before, Wednesday, June 10, downed trees that blocked 19 roads in Naperville, according to city Director of Communications Linda LaCloche.

The NWS rating is preliminary. No injuries have been reported in connection with the Naperville tornado, and no damage dollar estimates have been released.

Naperville's free citywide brush collection, launched in response to debris from both storms, began Monday, June 15, and is scheduled to wrap up by Saturday, June 27, according to the city.