Thu. Oct 2nd, 2025

WILD weather has hit another Brit holiday hotspot, leaving cars floating down streets and homes flooded with water.

Photos of the crazy weather have surfaced online as Greek locals begin recovery efforts ahead of further storms.

ERTGreece is the latest holiday destination to be hit by wild weather[/caption]

EPTPeople have been left trapped in their homes and cars underwater after heavy rain caused flash flooding[/caption]

EPTGreeks brace for further impact as another 48 hours of rain and hail have been predicted[/caption]

Cars have been left underwater, main streets have turned into rivers and the ground floor of many homes have been flooded.

In Corfu, a British family’s car got stuck on an uphill dirt track, leaving them to be rescued by local emergency services.

The flooding has also left many residents of Oiniades and Aitoliko in Aitoloakarnania unable to leave their homes.

Amid the chaos, heavy rainfall has caused landslides in Nechori, resulting in major issues on the surrounding road networks.

Police and other emergency services are on the scene.

The southern European nation is now bracing itself for a further 48 hours of hell as hailstorms and more heavy rain are predicted to hit on Thursday afternoon.

As flash flooding hits Greece, early snowfall is expected in Western Macedonia, while heavy rainfall and storms are forecast for Thrace, the Aegean and Crete.

Greece is the latest victim to the wild weather thrashing the Mediterranean, after Italy and Spain were hit with wild storms earlier in the week.

Italian residents in Agrigento Town and the San Leone hamlet in Sicily were also left unable to leave their homes due to flash flooding following wild storms.

During the deluge, a woman was reported missing, believed to have been swept away in flood waters after trying to get out of her car.

The search for her remains ongoing.

Holidaymakers in Ibiza also witnessed a rock slide crash down onto a hillside hotel, leaving three people injured.

The falling rocks caused hundreds of people to evacuate in order to avoid being crushed beneath the boulders.

In terrifying video of the avalanche, a  British tourist can be heard repeatedly yelling: “Oh my God, oh my God”, as the rocks smashed into the hotel complex.

Guests could be seen rushing out onto their balconies as the rocks crashed down.

Staggering aerial videos have revealed the full devastation of brutal floods that swamped Ibiza after a biblical downpour.

EPTMore heavy rain is forecast for the region over the next two days[/caption]

A heat map from a Greek media outlet shows the expected devastation about to hit the country. Credit: weather.gr

Cars and debris were strewn around the streets by gushing floodwater and a landslide crashed through a hotel – but the clean-up has now begun.

Footage from a police helicopter shows the vast sea-front promenades totally submerged in brown floodwater, which gushes into the sea.

Locals can be seen battling through the depths as rubbish and muck sail through streets on the current.

Parked cars are submerged up to their bonnets – with some clearly flooded beyond repair.

Passengers arriving from a ferry can be seen having to wade through deep water, holding their luggage aloft to avoid it being drenched.

An “extraordinary danger” red alert was slapped on the island on Tuesday as the tail of Storm Gabrielle brushed over the Balearics.

EPTThe storms are slated to bring snowfall to Macedonia as hail is forecast for Greece[/caption]

EPTThe Greek community has been left battered by the floods[/caption]

Spain was forced to draft in the army and police reinforcements to help guide Ibiza through the treacherous floods.

A helicopter buzzed members of a specialist Armed Forces unit into the island from a mainland army base near Valencia.

Troops from the Military Emergencies Unit (UME), which were used in last October’s deadly floods in Valencia, were also deployed to Ibiza.

The Civil Guard revealed this morning it had rescued an astonishing 148 people from flooded properties and stricken cars in 59 separate operations.

One horrifying picture they posted showed a car disappearing under flood water with just its number plate visible.

In others they were seen helping people to safety using a rope and float aids to guide them.

Some operations were particularly complex – such as when a girl, a woman, two men, and two dogs were floated across turbulent water on a paddleboard in the midst of the storm.

At least two people were reported to have been seriously injured.

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