Abstract. The archipelagos of Vanuatu and Eastern Solomon Islands, scattered over 1500 km along the Vanuatu Arc, include dozens of inhabited volcanic islands exposed to many natural hazards which impact their populations more or less severely. Due to the location of these islands upon a subduction interface, known as the Vanuatu Subduction Zone, tsunamis triggered by earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, and landslides locally, regionally and in the far field, represent a permanent threat. If catalogues already listed tsunamis having occurred in the Vanuatu Arc, they were not exclusively focusing on this region. This study goes further in the listing of tsunamis reported and/or recorded in the Vanuatu Arc, analysing existing catalogues, historical documents, and sea-level data from the 5 coastal tide gauges located in Vanuatu at Port Vila (Efate), Luganville (Santo), Litzlitz (Malekula) and Lenakel (Tanna) and in the Eastern Solomon Islands Province at Lata (Ndende). It allows to identify 100 tsunamis since 1863, 15 of them showing wave amplitude and/or run-up height of more than one meter and 8 between 0.3 and 1 m. If it is known that some tsunamis occurred by the past, information about the wave amplitude or potential run-up is sometime lost (15 events). Also, tsunamis reported in neighbouring islands like New Caledonia, but not reported or recorded in the Vanuatu Arc are discussed, as well as debated events or events with no known origin(s).