“…Malawi is located within a 900 km-long amagmatic section of the Western Branch of the East African Rift (EAR), and provides an ideal case study to investigate PSHA in a low strain rate region with a thick seismogenic layer as: (1) geodeticallyderived regional extension rates are low (0.5-2 mm/yr; Stamps et al, 2021;Wedmore et al, 2021), but nevertheless an order of magnitude higher than inferred from the last 50 years of instrumentally-recorded seismicity (Hodge et al, 2015;Ebinger et al, 2019), and (2) the seismogenic layer is ∼30-40 km thick (Jackson & Blenkinsop, 1993;Nyblade & Langston, 1995;Ebinger et al, 2019;Stevens et al, 2021;Craig & Jackson, 2021). Furthermore, constraints on the seismogenic potential of Malawi's active faults have improved with the collection of new geologic and geodetic data (Hodge et al, 2019;Shillington et al, 2020;Wedmore et al, 2021;Williams, Wedmore, Scholz, et al, 2021a;Kolawole et al, 2021), which have been synthesised for seismic hazard analysis in the Malawi Seismogenic Source Database (MSSD; Williams, Wedmore, Fagereng, et al, 2021a) .…”