The largest tornado on record was 2.6 miles wide. It struck near El Reno, Oklahoma on May 31, 2013.
The average tornado is 50 yards wide and travels 5 miles.
The Tri-State tornado was a mile wide and traveled 219 miles.
The Joplin tornado traveled 22.1 miles.
The Hallam, Nebraska tornado was 2.5 miles wide and traveled 54 miles.
The Nile River is 4,135 miles long and the longest river in the world.
The distance a tornado travels varies considerably. A typical tornado travels only a mile or two. Some tornadoes will only bee on the ground for a few hundred feet. The worst tornadoes usually travel ten miles or more, with some paths being well over 100 miles long. The longest tornado track on record was 219 miles.
The Waco, Texas tornado traveled 20 miles and was 1/3 of a mile wide.
It depends on what you mean by how long a tornado is. Path length is the distance a tornado travels rather than any dimension of the tornado itself. A typical tornado has a path length of between half a mile and five miles long. Very brief tornadoes may only travel a few yards, while major tornadoes may be on the ground for more than 50 or even 100 miles. Path width is the actual diameter of the tornado at the ground. Most tornadoes are between 50 and 200 yards wide, but very large tornadoes can be over a mile or, in extremely rare cases, over two miles wide. The actual vortex of a tornado extends above cloud base anywhere from a mile to ten miles into the sky.
An F5 tornado can have a path length ranging anywhere from less than 10 miles to over 200 miles. Most fall into the range of 20 to 50 miles.
roughly 500 miles
There isn't a specific distance because all of the tornadoes in the world are not the same. The typical tornado may travel a mile or so, but path lengths may range from only a few yards to more than 200 miles.