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BA.3.2 / Cicada — COVID Variant Tracker

BA.3.2 is a new subvariant of the COVID-19 virus, part of the Omicron family. You may have seen it called "Cicada" in news coverage — that is an informal nickname, not an official name. It has now been confirmed in 23+ countries and detected in wastewater across 29 US states. It is currently being monitored by the World Health Organization (WHO) but is not classified as a variant of concern — meaning health authorities have not identified it as more dangerous than currently circulating strains. Symptoms appear similar to other recent COVID variants: mainly upper respiratory, like sore throat, runny nose, and fatigue. This page collects available detection data by country, explains what is known and unknown, and links directly to the sources behind every claim.

Also known asCicada— informal media name only

WHO classification

Variant under monitoring

As of March 2026

Countries with detections

23+

Based on available sequence data

Global share (est.)

<5%

Of recent submitted sequences; highly uncertain

Data coverage

Limited

Sequence submission rates vary widely by country

Last data review

13 May 2026

WHO is tracking BA.3.2 as a variant under monitoring (VUM) — the lowest monitoring tier. A VUM is a variant with genetic changes that may affect behaviour, but without confirmed evidence of increased risk compared to currently circulating variants. This classification can change as new data emerges.

Symptoms

No symptom data specific to BA.3.2 is yet available. The profile below reflects current Omicron-lineage subvariants broadly. This section will be updated as BA.3.2-specific clinical data emerges.

Common symptoms

  • Sore throat

    Most frequently reported across recent Omicron subvariants

  • Runny or blocked nose

    Typical upper respiratory presentation

  • Fatigue

    Often reported in early stages

  • Headache

    Common across subvariants

  • Cough

    Usually dry; less prominent than earlier variants

  • Muscle aches

    Moderate frequency

Less common

  • Fever

    Less common than in earlier variants; when present, usually mild

  • Loss of taste or smell

    Significantly less frequent than original Omicron wave

  • Shortness of breath

    More common in older adults or those with underlying conditions

  • Gastrointestinal symptoms

    Including nausea or diarrhoea; reported in a subset of cases

Severity: Current Omicron-lineage subvariants generally cause milder illness than earlier variants, particularly in vaccinated individuals. Severity risk remains higher for older adults, the immunocompromised, and those with underlying health conditions.

Seek medical attention if you experience difficulty breathing, persistent chest pain, confusion, or inability to stay awake. This information is not medical advice.

Country data

Search for a country to see available BA.3.2 detection and COVID-19 activity data. Data quality varies significantly by country.

Search for a country above, or select one from the map or table below to see available data.

BA.3.2 share — detected countries

% of recent sequences (last 60 days)

High confidence
Medium confidence
Low confidence

Click a row to see full detail

Click any row to view country detail. Sort by column headers.

JapanDetected~6.1%16 Mar 2026Moderate to high activity↑ RisingHigh
Hong KongDetected~5.8%17 Mar 2026Moderate activity↑ RisingHigh
IndiaDetected~5.7%14 Mar 2026Moderate activity↑ RisingMedium
South KoreaDetected~5.3%14 Mar 2026Moderate activity↑ RisingHigh
DenmarkDetected~5.1%17 Mar 2026Low to moderate activity↑ RisingHigh
SingaporeDetected~4.9%18 Mar 2026Moderate activity↑ RisingHigh
SwedenDetected~4.6%15 Mar 2026Low activity→ StableHigh
IsraelDetected~4.4%15 Mar 2026Moderate activity↑ RisingHigh
United KingdomDetected~4.2%15 Mar 2026Moderate activity↑ RisingHigh
SwitzerlandDetected~4%14 Mar 2026Low activity→ StableHigh
NetherlandsDetected~3.8%13 Mar 2026Low activity→ StableHigh
IrelandDetected~3.6%11 Mar 2026Low activity→ StableHigh
AustraliaDetected~3.5%11 Mar 2026Low to moderate activity→ StableHigh
AustriaDetected~3.4%13 Mar 2026Low activity→ StableHigh
BelgiumDetected~3.3%12 Mar 2026Low activity→ StableHigh
GermanyDetected~3.1%12 Mar 2026Low activity→ StableHigh
New ZealandDetected~3%10 Mar 2026Low activity→ StableMedium
United StatesDetected~2.8%10 Mar 2026Low to moderate activity→ StableMedium
ThailandDetected~2.7%5 Mar 2026Low to moderate activity→ StableMedium
SpainDetected~2.5%5 Mar 2026Low activity→ StableMedium
CanadaDetected~2.2%7 Mar 2026Low activity→ StableMedium
FranceDetected~2%8 Mar 2026Low activity→ StableMedium
ItalyDetected~1.9%3 Mar 2026Low activity→ StableMedium
BrazilDetected~1.4%28 Feb 2026Moderate activityLow
South AfricaUnknown15 Jan 2026Low activityLow
ChinaUnknownUnknown
RussiaUnknown20 Jan 2026Unknown
PortugalUnknown1 Feb 2026Low activityLow
MexicoUnknown30 Jan 2026Low
IndonesiaUnknownUnknown

What we know and don't know

What we know

  • BA.3.2 is a subvariant within the Omicron lineage of SARS-CoV-2.

  • WHO classifies BA.3.2 as a variant under monitoring (VUM) — the lowest monitoring tier, below variants of interest (VOI) and variants of concern (VOC).

  • BA.3.2 has been detected in submitted sequences from at least 12 countries as of late March 2026.

  • Some media coverage refers to BA.3.2 by the informal name "Cicada." This name is not used in official WHO or ECDC communications.

  • Countries with high-confidence recent detections include Japan, Hong Kong, Denmark, Singapore, South Korea, and the United Kingdom, based on available GISAID sequence data.

  • Global sequence submission rates have declined significantly since 2023, which limits the representativeness of available data.

What we don't know

  • Whether BA.3.2 has meaningful immune evasion advantages over currently circulating variants. No published clinical or immunological data is available as of this update.

  • Whether the severity profile of BA.3.2 differs from other recent Omicron subvariants. No comparative severity data is currently available.

  • The true global prevalence of BA.3.2. Sequence submission rates are too sparse and uneven to support global prevalence estimates with confidence.

  • Whether BA.3.2 is spreading in major countries with limited international sequencing, such as China, Indonesia, or Russia. Absence of data from these countries is not evidence of absence.

  • Whether WHO will reclassify BA.3.2 as a variant of interest or variant of concern. No signals currently indicate this is imminent, but the situation is evolving.

  • How BA.3.2's sequence-level characteristics translate to real-world transmissibility or clinical outcomes. Additional prospective data is needed.

Sources

Primary sources used in this page. Follow links to verify claims directly.

WHO Variant Tracking

World Health Organization

Official / Public health·

WHO classification and monitoring status for BA.3.2 as a variant under monitoring. Defines classification tiers and current global assessment.

GISAID EpiCoV Database

GISAID Initiative

Sequence database·

Primary international repository for SARS-CoV-2 genomic sequences. Sequence share and detection data for country-level BA.3.2 signals are derived from GISAID submissions.

UKHSA Technical Briefings

UK Health Security Agency

Official / Public health·

UK-specific BA.3.2 detection rates, sequencing coverage, and broader COVID-19 activity indicators for England.

CDC Respiratory Virus Data

US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Official / Public health·

US respiratory virus surveillance data including available SARS-CoV-2 variant and wastewater monitoring. National clinical sequencing volume has significantly declined since 2023.

RKI COVID-19 Surveillance

Robert Koch-Institut

Official / Public health·

German national COVID-19 surveillance hub. Weekly variant reports include BA.3.2 sequence share and broader epidemiological indicators.

ECDC COVID-19 Situation

European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control

Official / Public health·

Pan-European monitoring of SARS-CoV-2 variants. Aggregates national reporting from EU/EEA member states, including country-level detection data.

NIID Variant Surveillance

National Institute of Infectious Diseases (Japan)

Official / Public health·

Japan national variant report including BA.3.2 share in recent sequences and COVID-19 clinical activity data.

Nextstrain SARS-CoV-2 Phylogeny

Nextstrain / Bedford Lab

Sequence database·

Phylogenetic analysis and clade-level tracking of SARS-CoV-2. Useful for lineage context and geographic spread of BA.3.2. Uses openly available sequences (no GISAID login required).

Outbreak.info Lineage Reports

Outbreak.info / Scripps Research

Editorial summary·

Automated lineage prevalence tracking aggregated from GISAID. Used as a cross-reference for country-level share estimates.

Methodology & caveats

Country data is derived from GISAID sequence submissions and official national health authority reports. Confidence labels refer to data quality, not variant risk or severity. Sequence share values are not population-representative prevalence estimates.

Updates & latest developments

See all news →

Variant news and data changes, newest first.

  1. Site launched

    BA32.org goes live with country-level detection data, symptoms, sources, methodology, and structured what-we-know / what-we-don't-know blocks.

  2. WHO classification: variant under monitoring

    The World Health Organization classified BA.3.2 as a variant under monitoring (VUM) — the lowest monitoring tier. No evidence of increased severity or immune evasion has been confirmed. Classification may be updated as data emerges.

  3. BA.3.2 detected in growing number of countries

    Sequence data from GISAID and outbreak.info shows BA.3.2 present in an increasing number of countries with recent submissions, including Japan, Hong Kong, Denmark, Singapore, South Korea, and the UK. Japan and Hong Kong show the highest share among high-confidence datasets.

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