A magnitude 4.6 aftershock struck the northern coastal town of Caraballeda on Monday morning [1], [2].

The tremor occurred while international and local rescue workers were actively searching for survivors in La Guaira [1], [2], [3]. This secondary seismic event complicates an already perilous recovery operation following two massive earthquakes that hit the region on June 24, 2026 [1], [4].

Caraballeda is located about 40 km north of Caracas [2], [3]. The aftershock was felt strongly by crews working amid the ruins of La Guaira as they raced to find remaining survivors [1], [2].

The June 24 disaster consisted of twin earthquakes with magnitudes of 7.2 and 7.5 [1], [4]. These primary events caused widespread destruction across the coastal region, leaving thousands of homes and infrastructure projects in ruins.

Reports on the total death toll from the June 24 earthquakes vary significantly across sources. Government figures cited by MSN Ireland said more than 1,700 people died [5]. Other reports provide lower estimates, including 1,430 deaths reported by The Irish News [6] and 164 deaths reported by the Baltimore Sun [7].

Rescue workers continue to operate in unstable environments where further tremors could trigger additional collapses of debris. The coordination between local Venezuelan teams and international specialists remains critical as the window for finding survivors narrows.

A magnitude 4.6 aftershock struck the northern coastal town of Caraballeda on Monday morning.

The occurrence of a 4.6-magnitude aftershock five days after the primary 7.2 and 7.5 earthquakes underscores the ongoing instability of the region's fault lines. The wide discrepancy in reported death tolls, ranging from 164 to over 1,700, suggests significant challenges in communication and casualty accounting during the initial chaos of the disaster.