1,400+ reported
Confirmed Deaths
Based on official reporting and major wire coverage; totals may be revised
Updated: June 29, 2026 (auto-refreshed hourly)
A centralized platform aggregating real-time seismic data from the USGS, verified donation channels, live news feeds, and emergency resources. Information is reviewed against primary humanitarian and public-interest sources and updated as new confirmations are published.
Key Figures
1,400+ reported
Confirmed Deaths
Based on official reporting and major wire coverage; totals may be revised
3,200+ reported
Injured
Hospital demand remains high in affected states
Thousands
Families Displaced
Displacement estimates are still being consolidated
Verified against official reports, USGS, and humanitarian partners.
An independent, community-driven information aggregator built to help coordinate the relief effort.
Launched on June 25, 2026 to support emergency response. Priority is family tracing, official hotlines, and verified aid pathways. This project does not collect money directly.
Founder: Pedro Alizo, a Venezuelan-American living in Madrid, Spain. Contributing time and knowledge for greater humanitarian impact. Built with love <3.
Rescue Venezuela is a centralized hub that aggregates real-time news, verified donation channels, and emergency resources. We consolidate information from humanitarian organizations, public-interest sources, and independent newsrooms into one accessible platform.
This platform requires no account or login. We do not collect donations directly and we do not use ad tracking or personal profiling. We only measure aggregate, non-personal events to improve critical information delivery. All donation links go directly to verified humanitarian organizations.
We prioritize factual baselines from wire services and verifiable public-interest sources, including Reuters, AP, BBC, UN reporting, and USGS. We also use updates from humanitarian organizations for operational details. All sources are linked directly for transparency.
This platform is hosted on GitHub Pages and Cloudflare's free tier - designed to be fast, reliable, and accessible even on slow connections. It can be updated quickly as the situation evolves. If you have information to add or corrections to suggest, please reach out.
We treat opinion pages and commentary as perspective, not primary evidence. Material facts are only promoted to headline status when they are confirmed by at least one neutral primary source plus one independent secondary source. If major outlets disagree, we label uncertainty instead of presenting a single narrative as final.
"In an emergency, clear and verified information helps families make safer decisions."- Platform editorial principle
Family reunification, aftershock alerts, verified donation routing, and real-time updates.
Volunteer coordination, supply mapping, shelter tracking, and diaspora chapter operations.
Reconstruction tracking for schools, services, and long-term community recovery.
Every successful reunification shared on WhatsApp attracts more families seeking trusted guidance.
Aftershock alerts create daily return behavior and keep the response community active.
Diaspora chapters activate local city networks and mobilize support faster with clear information.
Transparent methodology and verifiable sources reduce noise and increase credibility.
Help spread awareness - every share can drive donations and support.
Ground Truth Map
Verified ground updates and area-level needs for community coordination.
Continuously updated from international wire reports, institutional briefings, and field coverage of the Venezuela earthquake response.
At Funerals, Venezuela’s Wounded Families and Friends Unite in Grief
Venezuelans began to bury some of the more than 1,700 victims of last week’s earthquakes, sharing tales of unimaginable loss.
The BBC's Will Grant reports on the efforts to dig out survivors in the port city of Catia la Mer.
Caracas and La Guaira affected by 4.6-magnitude tremor as death toll passes 1,700 and humanitarian crisis grows A strong aftershock has rattled northern Venezuela, sending terrified residents racing on to the streets five days after the twin earthquakes that killed 1,719 people,
Rescuers armed with a range of techniques continue to search through the rubble in Venezuela.
No damage reported in 4.6 magnitude aftershock; At least 1,450 people are known to have died in initial quakes but number is expected to rise In an update to X, El Salvador’s president has said that after hours of intensive work rescuers have freed Aaron Levi Cantillo Vargas, 21,
Dayana Patino, a mom who was pulled from the rubble of her Venezuelan home, recounted how she stayed alive for 32 hours to ensure her 18-day-old baby Juan David would survive following the devastating earthquake.
Lucas Trejo of Argentina loses wife and two children while Héctor Bello’s partner dies saving their daughter Family members of two professional footballers are among those killed by the twin earthquakes that struck Venezuela in a catastrophe that has claimed at least 1,719 lives.
Emergency response teams pressed on with their lifesaving mission in Venezuela on Monday as countless local responders and families continued their search for missing relatives “against impossible odds”, five days since the double earthquake disaster.
The survivors are hopeful the authorities will find them some form of temporary accommodation while the country rebuilds - for now they are dependant on donated food and clothing.
The United States military is helping with disaster relief in Venezuela following the earthquakes that wreaked havoc in the South American country.
The "miracle" rescue of 18-day-old baby Juan David is a symbol of hope in Venezuela after the devastating earthquakes.
Residents in quake-affected areas have expressed anger over the state's efforts to locate survivors and help victims, the BBC's Orla Guerin reports.
President says ‘we always hold onto hope’ as discovery of earthquake survivors spurs fresh search efforts despite dwindling chances of survival Mortuary in Caracas ‘overwhelmed’ as Venezuela struggles to respond after earthquakes A man and his teenage son were found alive under t
Survivors of Venezuela's devastating earthquakes are being cared for at a makeshift hospital formed on the site of a country club in Caraballeda.
Search and rescue crews race against time in La Guaira as 33 survivors are pulled from collapsed buildings while nearly 50,000 remain missing.
Some 680,000 children are among the 1.8 million people in need of humanitarian assistance following the earthquakes that struck Venezuela on 24 June, the UN child rights agency UNICEF reported on Sunday as rescue efforts continue.
Readers can compare wire, institutional, and editorial reporting on the same emergency timeline.