By: Jesse Greenspan

Chernobyl Timeline: How a Nuclear Accident Escalated to a Historic Disaster

The Chernobyl nuclear disaster was made worse when Soviet authorities initially denied the event and then acted slowly to contain it.

Sean Gallup/Getty Images

Published: April 15, 2019

Last Updated: March 02, 2025

A safety test, which took place on April 26, 1986, at the Chernobyl nuclear power station, was deemed so routine that the plant’s director didn’t even bother showing up. It quickly spiraled out of control, however, as an unexpected power surge and steam buildup led to a series of explosions that blew apart the reactor.

Considered history’s worst nuclear accident, the Chernobyl disaster killed 31 people directly, including 28 workers and firefighters who died of acute radiation poisoning during the cleanup. Experts believe it likewise caused thousands of premature cancer deaths, though the exact number is disputed. To this day, the area around the plant remains so contaminated that it’s officially closed off to human habitation.

Below is a blow-by-blow account of how this catastrophic meltdown occurred.

September 26, 1977: The Chernobyl nuclear power station, located about 65 miles north of Kiev, Ukraine (then part of the Soviet Union), begins supplying power to the grid.

February 1986: A Soviet official is quoted saying that the odds of a nuclear meltdown are “one in 10,000 years.” By this time, the Chernobyl site contains four 1,000-megawatt reactors, plus two additional reactors that are under construction.

A Safety Test Sets the Stage for a Meltdown

April 25, 1986, 1 a.m.: Chernobyl’s operators begin reducing power at reactor No. 4 in preparation for a safety test, which they have timed to coincide with a routine shutdown for maintenance. The test is supposed to determine whether, in the event of a power failure, the plant’s still-spinning turbines can produce enough electricity to keep coolant pumps running during the brief gap before the emergency generators kick in. Ironically, this safety test brings about the reactor’s destruction.

April 25, 1986, 2 p.m.: Reactor No. 4’s emergency core cooling system is disabled to keep it from interfering with the test. Though this doesn’t cause the accident, it worsens the impact. At around the same time, the test and shutdown are temporarily delayed to accommodate the region’s power needs.

April 25, 1986, 11:10 p.m.: Operators receive permission to continue with the test and shutdown. By now, the less-experienced night shift is on the job, which purportedly never received proper instructions on how to perform the test.

April 26, 1986, 12:28 a.m.: Power plummets to far below the level at which the reactor is considered stable. Operators respond by removing most of the control rods in violation of the plant’s safety guidelines, yet they still have trouble raising the power, in part due to xenon buildup in the core.

April 26, 1986, 1 a.m.: The power stabilizes, albeit at a lower than preferred level, and plant supervisors order the test to proceed. The automatic emergency shutdown system and other safety features are subsequently turned off.

An Unexpected Power Surge Triggers Disaster

The control panel of reactor unit 4 inside the Chernobyl exclusion zone and nuclear power plant in 2006. Reactor unit 4 was the one that blew up on April 26, 1986. 

Patrick Landmann/Getty Images

The control panel of reactor unit 4 inside the Chernobyl exclusion zone and nuclear power plant in 2006. Reactor unit 4 was the one that blew up on April 26, 1986. 

Patrick Landmann/Getty Images

April 26, 1986, 1:23:04 a.m.: The test officially begins, and an unexpected power surge occurs.

April 26, 1986, 1:23:40 a.m.: An operator presses the emergency shutdown button, but the control rods jam as they enter the core.

April 26, 1986, 1:23:58 a.m.: The first explosion, to be quickly followed by at least one more, blows the 1,000-ton roof right off the reactor and shoots a fireball high into the night sky. A blackout roils the plant as the air fills with dust and graphite chunks, and radiation begins spewing out. Walls and equipment collapse and dozens of fires start up, including one on top of the neighboring reactor. Despite all evidence to the contrary, the nuclear engineer in charge of the test insists that reactor No. 4 is still intact. He later dies of radiation poisoning.

April 26, 1986, 1:28 a.m.: The first firefighters arrive at the scene. They have no knowledge of the radiation and wear no protective clothing.

April 26, 1986, 2:15 a.m.: Local Soviet officials convene an emergency meeting at which they decide to block cars from exiting or entering Pripyat, a nearby city that was built to house Chernobyl’s workers. Police officers assisting with the roadblock likewise have no knowledge of the radiation and wear no protective clothing.

April 26, 1986, 5 a.m.: Officials shut down reactor No. 3, to be followed the next morning by reactor Nos. 1 and 2. They are re-opened months later.

April 26, 1986, 6:35 a.m.: By now, all fires have been extinguished except for a blaze in the reactor core, which will burn for days.

April 27, 1986, 10 a.m.: Helicopters begin dumping sand, clay, boron, lead and dolomite into the burning core in an attempt to slow radioactive emissions.

Delayed Evacuations Begin

The Elephants Foot of the Chernobyl disaster is shown in the immediate aftermath of the meltdown. The “Elephant’s Foot”, named for its appearance, is a solid mass made of melted nuclear fuel mixed with lots of concrete, sand and core sealing material that the fuel had melted through. It lies in a basement area under the original location of the core.

Universal History Archive/UIG/Getty Images

The Elephants Foot of the Chernobyl disaster is shown in the immediate aftermath of the meltdown. The “Elephant’s Foot”, named for its appearance, is a solid mass made of melted nuclear fuel mixed with lots of concrete, sand and core sealing material that the fuel had melted through. It lies in a basement area under the original location of the core.

Universal History Archive/UIG/Getty Images

April 27, 1986: 2 p.m.: After telling residents nothing about the disaster for some 36 hours, Soviet officials finally begin evacuating roughly 115,000 people from Pripyat, as well as nearby towns and villages. Residents are informed it will be temporary and that they should pack only vital documents and belongings, plus some food. Soon after, however, an exclusion zone is set up around Chernobyl that prevents their return.

April 28, 1986: Swedish air monitors detect a large amount of radiation in the atmosphere, which is traced back to the USSR. Soviet officials admit that there’s been an accident, but they falsely state the situation is under control.

April 29, 1986: Spy satellite photos provide U.S. officials with their first glimpse of the devastation wrought by the Chernobyl disaster.

May 1, 1986: Soviet officials refuse to cancel the May Day festivities in Kiev, even as radiation continues to be released unabated.

May 4, 1986: Liquid nitrogen is pumped underneath the dead reactor in order to cool it. Other aspects of the cleanup, which involves up to 800,000 workers, including bulldozing contaminated villages, shooting contaminated pets and livestock, and burying huge amounts of contaminated topsoil.

May 6, 1986: Radioactive emissions drop sharply, possibly because the fire in the core has burned itself out. Meanwhile, Soviet officials finally close schools in Kiev and advise residents to stay inside and to not eat leafy vegetables.

May 8, 1986: Workers finish draining about 20,000 tons of radioactive water from the basement under the core.

Sarcophagus Constructed Around Damaged Reactor

Over a hurried construction period of 206 days, crews erected a steel and cement sarcophagus to entomb the damaged reactor. Here, an employee stands in front of a radiation sign at the sarcophagus a few years after its construction. A 35,000-ton New Safe Confinement was built on tracks and then slid over the damaged reactor and existing sarcophagus in November 2016.

Igor Kostin/Sygma/Getty Images

Over a hurried construction period of 206 days, crews erected a steel and cement sarcophagus to entomb the damaged reactor. Here, an employee stands in front of a radiation sign at the sarcophagus a few years after its construction. A 35,000-ton New Safe Confinement was built on tracks and then slid over the damaged reactor and existing sarcophagus in November 2016.

Igor Kostin/Sygma/Getty Images

May 9, 1986: Workers begin pouring concrete under the reactor, which is later encased in an enormous concrete and metal structure known as the sarcophagus.

May 14, 1986: Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev speaks publicly about the incident for the first time, saying on state TV that “the worst is behind us.”

August 25-29, 1986: The International Atomic Energy Agency hosts a conference at which scientists blame the accident not just on human error and subpar safety culture, but also on Soviet reactor design flaws.

December 15, 2000: Unit 3, the last working reactor at Chernobyl, is shut down. Units 1 and 2 had been shut down in 1996 and 1991, respectively.

April 2006: Gorbachev writes that the Chernobyl disaster, “even more than my launch of perestroika, was perhaps the real cause of the collapse of the Soviet Union.”

A view of the Chernobyl Nuclear power plant three days after the explosion. Considered history’s worst nuclear accident, the Chernobyl disaster on April 26, 1986 killed 31 people directly, many due to radiation poisoning during the cleanup. The area around the plant remains so contaminated that it’s officially closed off to human habitation.

Hone/Gamma-Rapho/Getty Images

The Elephants Foot of the Chernobyl disaster is shown in the immediate aftermath of the meltdown. The “Elephant’s Foot”, named for its appearance, is a solid mass made of melted nuclear fuel mixed with lots of concrete, sand and core sealing material that the fuel had melted through. It lies in a basement area under the original location of the core.

Universal History Archive/UIG/Getty Images

A technician in one of the reactors of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant tests for high levels of radiation in May 1986 after the accident.

Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images

Under the sarcophagus, some 130 feet below ground, at the epicenter of the explosion, liquidator Georgi Reichtmann, a Chernobyl engineer, measures radiation levels in 1990.

Igor Kostin/Sygma/Getty Images

Over a hurried construction period of 206 days, crews erected a steel and cement sarcophagus to entomb the damaged reactor. Here, an employee stands in front of a radiation sign at the sarcophagus a few years after its construction. A 35,000-ton New Safe Confinement was built on tracks and then slid over the damaged reactor and existing sarcophagus in November 2016.

Igor Kostin/Sygma/Getty Images

The evacuation of 47,000 inhabitants of Pripyat in over a thousand buses, only took a few hours as local people were told to take few personal belongings and identity papers, as it was thought they would be returning several days later. Most would never return to their homes.

Igor Kostin/Sygma/Getty Images

A man scans his produce for radioactivity after the Chernobyl accident in May 1986 in Strasbourg, France.

Dominique Gutekunst/Gamma-Rapho/Getty Images

In this 2016 aerial view, a Soviet-era hammer and sickle stands on top of an abandoned apartment building in the ghost town of Pripyat not far from the Chernobyl nuclear power plant.

Sean Gallup/Getty Images

Pupils’ chairs stand on rotting floorboards in an auditorium of abandoned School Number 3 on September 30, 2015 in Pripyat, Ukraine. Pripyat lies only a couple miles from the former Chernobyl nuclear power plant and was built in the 1970s to house the plant’s workers and their families.

Getty Images / Sean Gallup

Bumper cars at a fair rust away in the ghost town of Pripyat, which was evacuated following the disaster. Today Pripyat remains a ghost-town, its apartment buildings, shops, restaurants, hospital, schools, cultural center and sports facilities derelict and its streets overgrown with trees. The city lies in the inner exclusion zone around Chernobyl where persistently high levels of radiation make the area uninhabitable for thousands of years to come.

Igor Kostin/Sygma/Getty Images

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About the author

Jesse Greenspan

Jesse Greenspan is a Bay Area-based freelance journalist who writes about history and the environment.

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Citation Information

Article title
Chernobyl Timeline: How a Nuclear Accident Escalated to a Historic Disaster
Website Name
History
Date Accessed
March 21, 2025
Publisher
A&E Television Networks
Last Updated
March 02, 2025
Original Published Date
April 15, 2019

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