Hurricane Season 2025 has arrived
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In the Atlantic Basin, which includes storms that form in the Atlantic, the Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of America (formerly known as Gulf of Mexico), hurricane season lasts from June 1 until Nov. 30. Historically, 97% of all tropical cyclones in the Atlantic will form between those two dates.
For the fourth consecutive year, the Atlantic hurricane season kicks off without a named storm forming before June 1, and there are no immediate signs of formation. The Atlantic Basin hurricane season spans 183 days,
All is quiet in the tropics for the first day of what may be a busy Atlantic Hurricane Season with the National Hurricane Center not expecting any systems to develop over the next 7 days.
There are no signs of tropical development across the Atlantic, Caribbean and Gulf for the next week, at least. Even the long-range forecasts show low odds of something developing in the western Caribbean or southwestern Gulf.
U.S. forecasters are expecting an above-normal 2025 Atlantic hurricane season, with 13 to 19 named storms, and 6 to 10 of those becoming hurricanes.
Atlantic basin consists of the northern Atlantic, Caribbean Sea and Gulf of America (formerly Gulf of Mexico). Andrea is the first named storm of the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season. According to ...
What areas are at the greatest risk of seeing a landfalling tropical system in 2025? The overall signal this year is that the gulf will have a higher than average chance of being directly impacted this hurricane season – with the U.S. East Coast having an at or even below average chance for landfall.
Atlantic hurricane season will bring months of danger for millions of Americans. Here's a primer on what to know.