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What hurricane season was like the year you were born


AFP via Getty Images

What hurricane season was like the year you were born

A man walks down a flooded street in the Juana Matos neighborhood of Catano, Puerto Rico, on September 19, 2022, after the passage of Hurricane Fiona.

The fast winds, rapid rainfall, and huge storm surges of hurricanes make this natural disaster responsible for many deaths and millions of dollars worth of damage each year. Capable of triggering flash floods, mudslides, and tornadoes, even weak hurricanes can cause extensive destruction to property, infrastructure, and crops. Other hurricanes remain at sea and never make landfall, limiting the destruction they cause. Advancements in technology, particularly satellite imaging, have greatly improved warnings and advisories that prompted live-saving evacuations. But not all lives can be spared.

Also known as tropical cyclones, hurricanes are large, wet storms with high winds that form over warm water. Hurricane season in the Atlantic Basin—the Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, and the Caribbean Sea—runs from June 1 to Nov. 30 each year, though some hurricanes do form outside of this season. Many tropical storms are produced on an average year, though not all reach the strength of hurricanes.

Hurricanes are rated using the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale. Category 1 hurricanes have the lowest wind speeds at 74-95 miles per hour, and Category 5 hurricanes have the strongest winds at 157 miles per hour or higher. Storms that are Category 3 and above are considered major hurricanes.

Hurricanes and other weather disasters have become more reliably destructive in recent years. There were 21 named storms and seven hurricanes during the 2021 Atlantic hurricane season, with four of those seven hurricanes considered major. 2021 marked “the sixth consecutive above-normal Atlantic hurricane season,” according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. NOAA predicted another above-average season for 2022, a forecast already coming true.

Some hurricane seasons are worse than others. In 1920, the strongest hurricane was a Category 2 storm that killed one person in Louisiana. Others are devastating and destroy entire cities. Hurricane Katrina, an infamous storm that struck the U.S. in 2005, delivered lasting damage to New Orleans and cost the country over $100 billion.

Stacker obtained hurricane data, updated in 2021, from the NOAA’s Atlantic Oceanic and Meteorological Laboratory. A list of notable events or facts from each year was compiled from news, scientific, and government reports. Read on to learn about the noteworthy tropical storms and hurricanes from the year you were born.

You may also like: How to prepare for 15 types of emergencies



Bettmann // Getty Images

1919: The Atlantic-Gulf Hurricane

– Named storms: 5 (6.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 2 (3.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 1 (1.52 less than average)

Because there was no satellite imagery in 1919, meteorologists temporarily lost track of a Category 4 Atlantic Gulf hurricane when ships stopped transmitting information about it. This storm was the deadliest hurricane ever to hit the Texas Coastal Bend, and it caused more than 500 people to die or be lost due to sinking or missing ships.

[Pictured: Map plotting the track and the intensity of the 1919 hurricane, according to the Saffir–Simpson scale.]



Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images

1920: Louisiana hurricane kills one person

– Named storms: 5 (6.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 4 (1.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 0 (2.52 less than average)

The 1920 hurricane season was less active than usual. One of the year’s most notable storms was a Category 2 hurricane that hit Louisiana, killing one person. The storm ruined the sugar crop and caused $1.45 million in total damages.



State Library and Archives of Florida // Wikimedia Commons

1921: The forgotten nightmare hurricane

– Named storms: 7 (4.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 5 (0.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

On Oct. 28, 1921, Tampa Bay, Florida, experienced its most damaging hurricane since 1848. The unnamed hurricane killed eight people and cost over $5 million, not adjusted for inflation. It smashed boats against docks and destroyed parts of the local sea wall.

[Pictured: Wreckage of Safety Harbor Springs Pavillion after the 1921 hurricane.]



Canva

1922: An international hurricane season

– Named storms: 5 (6.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 3 (2.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 1 (1.52 less than average)

No hurricanes made landfall in the U.S. during the 1922 hurricane season. However, a hurricane that downgraded to a tropical storm did strike El Salvador, overflowing the Rio Grande and causing more than $5 million of damage.



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1923: Four hurricanes hit the US

– Named storms: 9 (2.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 4 (1.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 1 (1.52 less than average)

The 1923 hurricane season featured the most tropical storms since 1916. This count includes four hurricanes that touched down in the U.S., three of which made landfall along the Gulf Coast and one that hit Massachusetts.



Maksmilian // Shutterstock

1924: First Category 5 on record

– Named storms: 11 (0.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 5 (0.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

A Category 5 hurricane struck Cuba in 1925. This unnamed storm was the first Category 5 hurricane recorded in the database managed by the National Hurricane Center.



Topical Press Agency // Getty Images

1925: Latest hurricane to hit the U.S.

– Named storms: 4 (7.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 1 (4.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 0 (2.52 less than average)

The 1925 season started late, with the first hurricane beginning on Aug. 18. That season also included a hurricane that made landfall in Florida on Nov. 30, the latest hurricane to hit the U.S.



Bettmann // Getty Images

1926: A deadly hurricane season

– Named storms: 11 (0.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 8 (2.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 6 (3.48 more than average)

Of the eight hurricanes in the 1926 season, four proved particularly deadly. A storm in July killed 247 people, an August storm killed 25, a September storm killed 372, and a hurricane in October 1926 killed 709.



Canva

1927: Storms pass the US, hit Canada

– Named storms: 8 (3.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 4 (1.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 1 (1.52 less than average)

No hurricanes struck the U.S. in 1927. The most significant hurricane of the season was nicknamed The Great August Gales, and it was the deadliest tropical storm to hit Canada in the 1920s.



Keystone-France // Getty Images

1928: Second deadliest to hit US

– Named storms: 6 (5.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 4 (1.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 1 (1.52 less than average)

The Okeechobee Hurricane of 1928 was one of the deadliest storms ever to hit the U.S., killing between 2,500 and 3,000 people. The hurricane also hit Puerto Rico, landing on Sept. 13, the feast day of Saint Philip. It is the second hurricane to hit Puerto Rico on this day of celebration.



Topical Press Agency // Getty Images

1929: A three-day stationary hurricane

– Named storms: 5 (6.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 3 (2.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 1 (1.52 less than average)

The Great Bahamas Hurricane, also known as the Great Andros Island hurricane, barely moved over the course of three days, hovering above Nassau and Andros in the Bahamas. It was also the first hurricane to approach the Bahamas from a northeast direction.



Keystone-France // Getty Images

1930: Fifth deadliest Atlantic hurricane

– Named storms: 3 (8.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 2 (3.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

Though 1930 had a quiet hurricane season overall, it also had one of the Atlantic Ocean’s deadliest hurricanes. The Dominican Republic Hurricane is the fifth deadliest storm in the region’s history. It created a path of destruction up to 20 miles wide and killed between 2,000 and 8,000 people in the Dominican Republic, though it also brought much-needed rain to Puerto Rico.



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1931: Deadliest hurricane to hit Belize

– Named storms: 13 (2.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 3 (2.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 1 (1.52 less than average)

In 1931, a Category 4 hurricane hit Belize, also known as British Honduras, and killed about 2,500 people. It is the deadliest hurricane to hit Belize in recorded history.



Keystone-France // Getty Images

1932: Category 4 hurricane strikes Cuba

– Named storms: 15 (4.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 6 (0.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 4 (1.48 more than average)

The Huracán de Santa Cruz del Sur, a Category 4 storm, hit Cuba in 1932 and caused 3,500 fatalities. Most of the deaths were due to a storm surge, a flash flood that rose to over 20 feet.



tuaindeed // Shutterstock

1933: Third most active hurricane season

– Named storms: 20 (9.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 11 (5.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 6 (3.48 more than average)

The 1933 season is the Atlantic Basin’s third most active hurricane season in recorded history. It also held the record for the highest amount of wind energy created during the Atlantic hurricane season until 2011.



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1934: Tropical storm kills 3,000 people

– Named storms: 13 (2.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 7 (1.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 1 (1.52 less than average)

A tropical storm that later became a hurricane killed 3,000 people in Honduras and El Salvador in June 1934. Many of the deaths were due to flash floods and mudslides triggered by heavy rainfall.



Keystone-France // Getty Images

1935: Category 5 Labor Day Hurricane

– Named storms: 8 (3.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 5 (0.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 3 (0.48 more than average)

At the time of its landfall, the 1935 Labor Day Hurricane was one of the strongest storms to touch down on the U.S. It was also the first Category 5 hurricane to hit the U.S. in the 1900s. Although not nearly as strong as the Labor Day Hurricane, a Category 1 hurricane also killed 2,150 people in Haiti and Honduras in October of that year.



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1936: Sixth most active hurricane season

– Named storms: 17 (6.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 7 (1.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 1 (1.52 less than average)

The 1936 hurricane season was the Atlantic Ocean’s sixth most active season in modern history, according to records beginning in 1851. Interestingly, there were fewer tropical storms than usual in the Caribbean Sea that year.



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1937: A short hurricane season

– Named storms: 11 (0.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 4 (1.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 1 (1.52 less than average)

The first tropical disturbance of the 1937 hurricane season was on July 29, and the last ended on Oct. 4. This comparatively short season also saw less activity than expected in the Caribbean Sea.



Bettmann // Getty Images

1938: Fastest hurricane eye movement

– Named storms: 9 (2.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 4 (1.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

The Great New England Hurricane of 1938 recorded the fastest movement speed of an eye of a hurricane. The storm traversed 600 miles in 12 hours, moving more than 60 miles per hour. It earned the nickname The Long Island Express due to its train-like high speeds.



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1939: Four hurricanes strike Southern California

– Named storms: 6 (5.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 3 (2.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 1 (1.52 less than average)

In 1939, for the first time in recorded history, four hurricanes hit Southern California in a single September. A tropical storm in the area, referred to as the Lash of St. Francis, led to the greatest amount of rainfall recorded locally at the time.



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1940: Wettest hurricane in Louisiana history

– Named storms: 9 (2.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 6 (0.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 0 (2.52 less than average)

An unnamed hurricane during 1940 is the wettest ever recorded in Louisiana’s history. Rainfall peaked in the city of Crowley with 33.71 inches of rain.



Bettmann // Getty Images

1941: Unnamed hurricane breaches Texas seawall

– Named storms: 6 (5.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 4 (1.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 3 (0.48 more than average)

A September 1941 hurricane breached the seawall in Texas near East Matagorda Bay. Water from the rising tide flooded residential and business areas, covering a local airport in up to 3 feet of water. The hurricane cost $7 million in all, with $5 million attributed to crop damage.



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1942: Multiple hurricanes batter Texas

– Named storms: 11 (0.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 4 (1.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 1 (1.52 less than average)

The 1942 season is only one of seven in which multiple hurricanes made landfall in Texas. One of these hurricanes hit Matagorda Bay, causing eight fatalities, $11.5 million in property damage, and $15 million in crop damage.



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1943: Surprise hurricane during World War II

– Named storms: 10 (1.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 5 (0.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

During World War II, ship broadcasts in the Gulf of Mexico went silent so the military could keep a lookout for German U-boats. This radio silence meant no transmissions on weather conditions, so the hurricane that hit the Houston-Galveston area of Texas came without warning, earning its nickname as the Surprise Hurricane.



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1944: Hurricane sinks World War II ships

– Named storms: 14 (3.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 8 (2.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 3 (0.48 more than average)

The Great Atlantic Hurricane made landfall on Long Island and Rhode Island, causing 46 direct fatalities and $100 million in damage. The storm also sank five World War II vessels, killing 334 additional people.



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1945: Homestead Hurricane destroys blimp hangars

– Named storms: 11 (0.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 5 (0.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

The Homestead Hurricane’s winds started a fire that burnt down wooden hangars used during World War II to house blimps. The storm and its resulting fire also destroyed 25 blimps and 150 automobiles and injured 200 people.



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1946: No hurricane deaths in U.S.

– Named storms: 6 (5.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 3 (2.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 1 (1.52 less than average)

No lives were lost to tropical storms in the U.S. in 1946, and property damage stayed under $10 million. Any storms that reached the U.S. coast that season were too mild to cause much damage.



Photo 12 // Getty Images

1947: Attempts to weaken a hurricane

– Named storms: 9 (2.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 5 (0.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

For the first time in 1947, the government and private groups tried to weaken a hurricane, using methods such as spreading dry ice throughout the storm. The Air Force led a flight into a hurricane that same year, marking the first time experts could obtain a detailed examination of circulation within the upper level of a hurricane’s core.



Florida Keys–Public Libraries // Wikimedia Commons

1948: Two hurricanes hit south Florida

– Named storms: 9 (2.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 6 (0.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 4 (1.48 more than average)

Two hurricanes hit South Florida two weeks apart, causing extensive flood damage. The first hurricane of the 1948 season reportedly featured gusts reaching 160 miles per hour and produced 6 feet of storm surge, a rise in seawater levels due to a storm.



Pixabay

1949: Hurricane damages fruit in Florida

– Named storms: 13 (2.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 7 (1.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 3 (0.48 more than average)

An August 1949 hurricane caused severe damage to citrus crops. The storm cost Florida $20 million in agricultural damage, including the loss of an estimated 14 million boxes of fruit.



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1950: Hurricanes given names

– Named storms: 13 (2.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 11 (5.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 8 (5.48 more than average)

1950 was the first year that hurricanes in the Atlantic were given names. The new convention was to use names from the British–U.S. World War II spelling alphabet, starting with Hurricane Able. The fifth storm of the season, Hurricane Easy, devastated the town of Cedar Key in Florida.



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1951: Hurricane Charlie hits Jamaica

– Named storms: 10 (1.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 8 (2.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 5 (2.48 more than average)

No hurricanes made landfall in the U.S. in 1951. However, the third hurricane of the season, Hurricane Charlie, was one of the most destructive storms in recorded history, killing more than 100 people in Jamaica and causing up to $50 million in damage.



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1952: A rare winter tropical storm

– Named storms: 7 (4.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 6 (0.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 3 (0.48 more than average)

An unnamed winter tropical storm hit Florida on Feb. 2, Groundhog Day—well before the June start of the 1952 hurricane season. The storm struck as a tropical depression and damaged crops across the state.



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1953: Hurricane naming system changes again

– Named storms: 14 (3.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 6 (0.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 4 (1.48 more than average)

In 1953, the U.S. scrapped the military naming system of 1950 and opted for an all-female list of names. That year’s strongest hurricane was Hurricane Carol, which caused $1 million in damage to fishing craft along the New England coast alone.



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1954: Storms wallop New England

– Named storms: 11 (0.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 8 (2.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

Until 1954, most people believed that hurricanes spared New England, but their minds changed when tropical cyclones hit the region twice that year. The storms came close to destroying a few towns in Rhode Island, and Hurricane Carol caused more property damage than any other hurricane by that point in recorded history, a record the storm would only hold for one year.



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1955: Hurricanes Diane and Connie

– Named storms: 12 (1.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 9 (3.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 6 (3.48 more than average)

Hurricane Diane followed so soon after Hurricane Connie that their floods caused more property damage than any hurricane in history up until that point. The two storms hit the coast of North Carolina just five days apart. Just like the previous year, the damage was concentrated in the Northeast.



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1956: A mild hurricane season

– Named storms: 8 (3.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 4 (1.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

The 1956 season featured only a few hurricanes, and those storms were of low intensity, especially compared to the years prior. Hurricane Flossy was the only storm to touch down on the contiguous U.S., causing heavy rainfall in Alabama and Florida.



Shel Hershorn – HA/Inactive // Getty Images

1957: A destructive June hurricane

– Named storms: 8 (3.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 3 (2.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

Hurricane Audrey was one of the most destructive hurricanes to happen during June, leading to 390 deaths. Audrey was also the likely cause of several tornadoes reported around its strike zone. The storm made landfall as a Category 4 hurricane around the Louisiana-Texas border.



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1958: No hurricanes until August

– Named storms: 10 (1.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 7 (1.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 5 (2.48 more than average)

The 1958 season didn’t have significant storm activity over the Atlantic until mid-August. Hurricane Helene was one of the most intense and destructive of the season, causing $11 million in damage in North Carolina, though it led to no fatalities.



United States Marine Corps

1959: Hurricane Gracie evacuation saves lives

– Named storms: 11 (0.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 7 (1.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

Several of 1959’s hurricanes were weak, just barely achieving hurricane status. Hurricane Gracie, which occurred late in the season, was one of the most intense, causing 22 out of the 24 fatalities that year. It was the only major hurricane to reach the U.S. mainland, and accurate warnings enabled many people to evacuate, resulting in a low number of deaths.



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1960: Hurricane Donna reaches far

– Named storms: 7 (4.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 4 (1.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

Hurricane Donna hit in September 196 and is the only hurricane to have caused hurricane-scale winds across Florida, the Mid-Atlantic region, and New England. It is the ninth strongest hurricane to hit the U.S., killing 50 people in the states. There were more fatalities elsewhere, including 107 in Puerto Rico.



Flip Schulke Archives // Getty Images

1961: Hurricane Carla forces evacuation

– Named storms: 11 (0.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 8 (2.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 7 (4.48 more than average)

Hurricane Carla was Category 5 until just before it touched down in Texas as a Category 4 storm. Still, Carla was one of the largest and most intense hurricanes ever to strike the Gulf Coast. Fortunately, only 46 people died because early warning allowed about half a million people to evacuate.



Bettmann // Getty Images

1962: A quiet year for hurricanes

– Named storms: 5 (6.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 3 (2.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 1 (1.52 less than average)

With significantly fewer storms than usual, 1962 was the quietest hurricane season since 1939. Even the storms that occurred were less intense than expected. The first hurricane of the season, dubbed Alma, barely reached hurricane status and only stayed a hurricane for a few hours.



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1963: Hurricane Flora strikes Haiti

– Named storms: 9 (2.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 7 (1.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

The 1963 hurricane season started slow, but only two days without tropical cyclones appeared on weather charts from Sept. 10 to the end of October. Hurricane Flora was the deadliest storm the Atlantic had ever experienced, killing an estimated 6,892 people. It hit Haiti the hardest, taking the lives of over 5,000 people in the country.



Bettmann // Getty Images

1964: Four hurricanes hit US mainland

– Named storms: 12 (1.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 6 (0.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 6 (3.48 more than average)

Four hurricanes hit the U.S. mainland in 1964, an occurrence that had only happened four other times since 1900. Hurricane Cleo killed 214 people, and Dora, a Category 4 hurricane, cost $240 million in damages—$2.1 billion when adjusted for inflation.



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1965: Official hurricane season established

– Named storms: 6 (5.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 4 (1.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 1 (1.52 less than average)

1965 marked the establishment of official hurricane season in the Atlantic, running from June 1 to Nov. 30. Hurricane season accounts for 97% of all tropical cyclone activity in that area. Also in 1965, Hurricane Betsy caused major damage as one of the costliest storms ever, knocking out 90% of power in New Orleans.



Photoshot // Getty Images

1966: Alma and Inez break records

– Named storms: 11 (0.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 7 (1.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 3 (0.48 more than average)

The first storm of the 1966 season, Hurricane Alma, arrived earlier than any other hurricane since 1825. Hurricane Inez, another 1966 storm, had the most advisories posted than any hurricane before, with a total of 65. Inez was also the first hurricane to hit all the West Indies, the Bahamas, Florida, and Mexico.



Bettmann // Getty Images

1967: Satellites track late hurricanes

– Named storms: 8 (3.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 6 (0.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 1 (1.52 less than average)

The 1967 season started late but contained a record number of hurricanes. That was also the first year that satellite images could track hurricanes and provide daily views of storms stretching across the entire Atlantic. This season also saw three hurricanes existing at the same time, a rare phenomenon.



Boston Globe // Getty Images

1968: Hurricane Gladys ends a drought

– Named storms: 8 (3.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 4 (1.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 0 (2.52 less than average)

With no significant storms, 1968 had an unusually calm hurricane season. Gladys, the only hurricane to hit the U.S., brought rainfall that broke a drought in North Carolina that was the worst since 1932. Unfortunately, Gladys also killed five people and caused $6.7 million in damage.



Bettmann // Getty Images

1969: Hurricane Camille devastates the U.S.

– Named storms: 18 (7.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 12 (6.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 5 (2.48 more than average)

Hurricane Camille was a Category 5 storm with winds reaching an estimated 200 miles per hour. It is one of the most expensive hurricanes in U.S. history. Camille caused intense damage, even splitting an island off the coast of Mississippi in half with its heavy rain and winds.



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1970: Hurricane Celia’s destructive winds

– Named storms: 10 (1.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 5 (0.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

The only hurricane that significantly impacted the U.S. during the 1970 season was Hurricane Celia. The storm caused $454 million in property damage, although almost all the damage was due to wind, not water.



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1971: Hurricane Ginger sets long-lasting record

– Named storms: 13 (2.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 6 (0.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 1 (1.52 less than average)

Hurricane Ginger broke records in 1971, becoming the second-longest-running hurricane in the Atlantic basin at 27 days. In contrast, 1971’s Hurricane Kirsty only lasted one day.



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1972: Category 1 hurricane wreaks havoc

– Named storms: 7 (4.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 3 (2.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 0 (2.52 less than average)

There were fewer tropical storms and hurricanes in 1972 than any year since 1930, and most of the storms formed in temperate waters instead of tropical waters. The only storm that originated in the tropics was Hurricane Agnes, which killed 130 people and caused $2 billion in damage in Pennsylvania alone, making it the first Category 1 storm in the Atlantic to have its name retired.



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1973: One of the least damaging seasons

– Named storms: 8 (3.00 less than average
– Hurricanes: 4 (1.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 1 (1.52 less than average)

1973 was one of the least damaging hurricane seasons, with only 16 fatalities throughout the Atlantic, Caribbean, and Gulf of Mexico and less than $20 million in damage. No hurricanes crossed the U.S. coastline.



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1974: Hurricane Fifi strikes Honduras

– Named storms: 11 (0.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 4 (1.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

Hurricane Fifi brushed the coast of Honduras and made landfall in Belize, though it caused much more damage to the former country. In some regions, Fifi caused 24 inches of rain in 36 hours, triggering mudslides and flash floods that destroyed 182 towns and killed 8,000 people.



NOAA Photo Library // Wikimedia Commons

1975: Hurricane Eloise destroys Alabama crops

– Named storms: 9 (2.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 6 (0.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 3 (0.48 more than average)

After five years of low hurricane activity in the Atlantic, 1975 marked a return to normalcy. Hurricane Eloise was the only storm to make landfall in the U.S. and the most destructive storm that season, causing more than $100 million in agricultural losses in Alabama.



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1976: Hurricane Belle destroys Northeast crops

– Named storms: 10 (1.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 6 (0.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

Hurricane Belle was one of two named storms to hit the U.S. in 1976, though the other was barely classified as a tropical storm. Belle significantly weakened the day before it hit Long Island, yet it still caused $100 million in damage in the U.S., primarily due to crop damage in the Northeast.



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1977: Anita brings a late start

– Named storms: 6 (5.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 5 (0.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 1 (1.52 less than average)

Anita, the first hurricane of 1977, didn’t land until Aug. 29 and was one of the most intense storms ever in the Gulf of Mexico. Hurricane Anita primarily hit Mexico, where 35,000 people had evacuated, with another 65,000 evacuating from Texas and Louisiana.



Bettmann // Getty Images

1978: All-female storm names end

– Named storms: 12 (1.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 5 (0.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

1978 was the last year that Atlantic tropical storms were solely given female names, and the following year included both male and female names. Hurricane Greta hit Central America in 1978, killing four people in Belize and one in Honduras.



Bettmann // Getty Images

1979: Three tropical storms smash records

– Named storms: 9 (2.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 5 (0.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

Hurricane David hit in 1979, leaving 60,000 people homeless in Dominica as well as killing 2,000 people and leaving 200,000 homeless in the Dominican Republic. Hurricane Frederic was the costliest storm in U.S. history at the time, causing $2.3 billion in damage.



Jay Phagan // Wikimedia Commons

1980: Allen prompts oil rig evacuations

– Named storms: 11 (0.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 9 (3.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

Hurricane Allen was the most noteworthy storm of the 1980 season, a Category 5 hurricane that affected Haiti, Texas, and several Caribbean countries. Allen destroyed two offshore oil rigs in the Gulf of Mexico, and 13 people died in a helicopter crash in a rig evacuation. Half a million people living along the Gulf of Mexico were evacuated.



Mia2you // Shutterstock

1981: Five hurricanes in September

– Named storms: 12 (1.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 7 (1.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 3 (0.48 more than average)

There were no named storms in the Gulf of Mexico in 1981, an occurrence that had only happened twice before in the 20th century. The season also included five hurricanes in one month, September, which has also only been recorded twice before.



Joe Runci/The Boston Globe via Getty Images

1982: Least active season since 1931

– Named storms: 6 (5.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 2 (3.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 1 (1.52 less than average)

1982 was the least active hurricane season in 50 years based on both the total number of hurricanes and the number of days of hurricanes, which was only six. Like the previous year, no hurricanes struck the contiguous U.S. in 1982—only the second time that century that the U.S. was spared for two years in a row.



Bettmann // Getty Images

1983: Alicia ends hurricane drought

– Named storms: 4 (7.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 3 (2.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 1 (1.52 less than average)

On Aug. 18, 1983, Hurricane Alicia brought an end to the longest period in the 20th century without a hurricane hitting the contiguous U.S. Though Alicia was a minor Category 3 storm, it spawned 23 tornadoes, killed 21 people, and caused over $2 billion in damages.



Ted Dully/The Boston Globe via Getty Images

1984: Hurricane Diana hits eastern U.S.

– Named storms: 13 (2.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 5 (0.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 1 (1.52 less than average)

Hurricane Diana was the first and strongest hurricane of the 1984 season and the most intense storm to hit the Eastern U.S. seaboard since Hurricane Hazel in 1954. Diana caused $65 million in damages, of which $26 million can be attributed to agricultural damage.



Bettmann // Getty Images

1985: Worst season in 69 years

– Named storms: 11 (0.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 7 (1.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 3 (0.48 more than average)

The 1985 hurricane season was the worst in 69 years, causing $4.45 billion in damages and prompting a million people to evacuate. Six hurricanes and one tropical storm hit the contiguous U.S. that year, the most since 1916. The storms killed 100 people in Puerto Rico, 36 in the U.S., and 10 in Cuba.



Independent News and Media // Getty Images

1986: Strongest hurricane doesn’t make landfall

– Named storms: 6 (5.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 4 (1.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 0 (2.52 less than average)

The strongest hurricane of the 1986 season was Earl, which was also the season’s longest-lived, with seven days of hurricane-force winds. However, Earl never made landfall. Two hurricanes, Bonnie and Charley, did hit the U.S., causing $2 million and $15 million in damages, respectively.



WALTER ASTRADA/AFP via Getty Images

1987: Hurricane Emily breaks Caribbean silence

– Named storms: 7 (4.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 3 (2.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 1 (1.52 less than average)

Hurricane Emily was the first major hurricane to hit the Caribbean Islands since 1980, an unusually long stretch without hurricanes in the region. Emily killed three people in the Dominican Republic, though experts suspect the death toll would have been greater if the storm had hit 20 or 30 miles to the east.



Colin McConnell // Getty Images

1988: Most destructive in Jamaican history

– Named storms: 12 (1.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 5 (0.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 3 (0.48 more than average)

Hurricane Gilbert hit Jamaica as a Category 3 storm, the country’s first direct hit in 37 years. The hurricane damaged 95% of Jamaica’s hospitals and destroyed half of the country’s domestic water supply. Gilbert cost $4 million in damages in Jamaica alone and is the most destructive hurricane in the nation’s history. The storm moved on to strike Mexico first as a Category 5 storm and again as a Category 2 storm. 



Donald Wernly/NOAA // Wikimedia Commons

1989: Hurricane Hugo wipes out bananas

– Named storms: 11 (0.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 7 (1.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

Hurricane Hugo, a Category 5 storm that downgraded to Category 4 right before landfall, touched down in the Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, and South and North Carolina. Hugo destroyed all of Guadeloupe’s banana crops and left 35,000 people on the island homeless.



Gary Williams/Liaison // Getty Images

1990: Gustav stays in the water

– Named storms: 14 (3.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 8 (2.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 1 (1.52 less than average)

Hurricane Gustav was the only Category 3 storm of the 1990 season, but it never made landfall. Hurricane Diana, however, touched down in Mexico and caused 95 deaths.



Boston Globe // Getty Images

1991: Storms form in Bermuda hotspot

– Named storms: 8 (3.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 4 (1.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

All the major tropical storms of the 1991 season originated in a hot spot near Bermuda. Hurricane Bob, which hit New England, caused $1.5 billion in damages in the region, primarily affecting homes, boats, and beaches.



Joe Sohm/Visions of America // Getty Images

1992: Hurricane Andrew destroys weather instruments

– Named storms: 7 (4.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 4 (1.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 1 (1.52 less than average)

Hurricane Andrew, a Category 5 storm that hit southern Florida in 1992, is one of the strongest and costliest hurricanes on record. Andrew’s high winds flattened neighborhoods with speeds so high that they destroyed weather station instruments designed to track high wind speeds, though a privately owned instrument clocked the speed at 177 mph.



LUKE FRAZZA // Getty Images

1993: Hurricane Emily evacuations save lives

– Named storms: 8 (3.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 4 (1.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 1 (1.52 less than average)

Hurricane Emily was the only major hurricane of the 1993 season. Because Emily landed during Labor Day weekend, it cost the tourism industry about $10 million. Over 160,000 people were evacuated from North Carolina, and there were two casualties: a pair of swimmers that drowned in the town of Nags Head.



philippe giraud/Sygma via Getty Images

1994: A dry September and October

– Named storms: 7 (4.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 3 (2.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 0 (2.52 less than average)

Although September and October are usually active months for hurricanes, there were no storms during these months in 1994. Conversely, two hurricanes developed in November for the first time since the 1940s. Tropical storm Alberto produced record-breaking rainfall and floods in eastern Alabama and western Georgia, killing 30 people.



DOUG COLLIER // Getty Images

1995: A busy, costly hurricane season

– Named storms: 19 (8.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 11 (5.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 5 (2.48 more than average)

An unusually active year, 1995 saw several hurricanes that caused significant damage. Hurricane Opal generated $3 billion in damages in the southeastern U.S. and Florida Panhandle. Hurricane Luis cost the Leeward Islands in the Caribbean $2.5 billion, and Hurricane Marilyn did $1.5 billion worth of damage, mainly to the U.S. Virgin Islands.



James P Reed // Getty Images

1996: Record-breaking hurricane numbers

– Named storms: 13 (2.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 9 (3.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 6 (3.48 more than average)

1995 and 1996 were both active seasons with a combined total of 20 hurricanes, the most for consecutive seasons since accurate reporting began in the 1940s. That year six hurricanes passed over the Caribbean—the most since 1916, though they were all short-lived.



ADALBERTO ROQUE/AFP via Getty Images

1997: El Nino causes inactive season

– Named storms: 8 (3.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 3 (2.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 1 (1.52 less than average)

Hurricane Danny was the only hurricane to make landfall in 1997, killing five people. There were fewer hurricanes than average due to El Nino, which warmed ocean temperatures across the east-central and central Equatorial Pacific.



JOEL ROBINE // Getty Images

1998: Hurricane Mitch triggers extreme floods

– Named storms: 14 (3.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 10 (4.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 3 (0.48 more than average)

Tropical storms caused over 9,000 deaths during the 1998 hurricane season, primarily because of Hurricane Mitch, which caused massive flooding in Honduras and Nicaragua. Another 9,000 people went missing because of Hurricane Mitch.



TOM MIHALEK // Getty Images

1999: Many Category 4 hurricanes

– Named storms: 12 (1.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 8 (2.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 5 (2.48 more than average)

The 1999 season saw four Category 4 hurricanes, the most in one season since 1886. However, the deadliest storm that year was not a hurricane but a tropical depression with heavy rains and flooding that caused 400 fatalities in Mexico.



Robert King // Getty Images

2000: Hurricane Alberto lasts many days

– Named storms: 15 (4.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 8 (2.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 3 (0.48 more than average)

Hurricane Alberto was the longest-lived hurricane on record to form in August 2000 in the Atlantic basin. It remained at sea for most of its existence.



JAMES NIELSEN // Getty Images

2001: Costliest and deadliest tropical storm

– Named storms: 15 (4.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 9 (3.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 4 (1.48 more than average)

Tropical Storm Allison is the costliest tropical storm in U.S. recorded history. It killed 41 people and caused $5 billion in damages. Allison is only one of two tropical storms that have had their names retired.



Joe Raedle // Getty Images

2002: El Nino causes few hurricanes

– Named storms: 12 (1.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 4 (1.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

Because of El Nino, there were fewer hurricanes than average during the 2002 season. Hurricane Lili was the only hurricane to hit the U.S. between 1999 and 2002, and it was 2002’s only storm to make landfall while still classified as a hurricane.



Joe Raedle // Getty Images

2003: Hurricane Isabel hits Chesapeake Bay

– Named storms: 16 (5.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 7 (1.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 3 (0.48 more than average)

Hurricane Isabel was the worst storm to hit the Chesapeake Bay in 10 years. Isabel was also the costliest and deadliest hurricane of the season, leading to 17 deaths and $3 billion in damages, primarily due to flooding.



STEPHEN JAFFE // Getty Images

2004: Hurricane Jeanne causes Haiti mudslides

– Named storms: 15 (4.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 9 (3.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 6 (3.48 more than average)

Four hurricanes affected Florida within six weeks during the 2004 season. The last of these, Hurricane Jeanne, is the 12th deadliest Atlantic hurricane on record. Intense rainfalls caused mudslides in the mountains of Haiti, killing more than 3,000 people.



Chris Graythen // Getty Images

2005: Hurricane Katrina devastates New Orleans

– Named storms: 28 (17.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 15 (9.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 7 (4.48 more than average)

Hurricane Katrina, one of the most infamous hurricanes, displaced more than a million people around the Gulf of Mexico. Katrina has the highest cost of any hurricane to hit the U.S., causing $178 billion (in adjusted 2021 dollars) in damage and killing 1,833 people.



James P Reed/Corbis via Getty Images

2006: The calm following the storm

– Named storms: 10 (1.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 5 (0.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

After two years of frequent tropical storms, 2006 was comparatively calm, with only three tropical storms landing in the U.S. The year’s strongest hurricane was Helene, a Category 3 storm with maximum sustained winds of 125 miles per hour.



OMAR TORRES // Getty Images

2007: Two Category 5 hurricane landfalls

– Named storms: 15 (4.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 6 (0.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

2007 was the first hurricane season in which two Category 5 storms made landfall. Hurricane Dean was the first hurricane of the season, reaching Category 5 status over the Caribbean and making landfall on the Yucatán Peninsula in Mexico.



Smiley N. Pool-Pool // Getty Images

2008: Hurricane Ike disrupts Montreal’s subways

– Named storms: 16 (5.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 8 (2.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 5 (2.48 more than average)

Hurricane Ike, the strongest storm of 2008, mainly impacted Texas, Louisiana, and Arkansas, though its effects reached as far as Canada. Humidity caused by the storm sparked an electrical malfunction that required the temporary closure of part of Montreal’s subway system.



ELMER MARTINEZ/AFP via Getty Images

2009: A hurricane lull

– Named storms: 9 (2.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 3 (2.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

The 2009 season had the lowest number of hurricanes in the Atlantic since 1997. That year marked the thirteenth time that no hurricanes have made landfall in the U.S. during hurricane season.



Spencer Platt // Getty Images

2010: Third most active hurricane season

– Named storms: 19 (8.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 12 (6.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 5 (2.48 more than average)

The 2010 hurricane season is the third most active in recorded history. It’s also the only season to have over nine hurricanes without a single one making landfall in the U.S.



Brendan Hoffman // Getty Images

2011: Major hurricane drought in the U.S.

– Named storms: 19 (8.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 7 (1.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 4 (1.48 more than average)

No major hurricanes hit the U.S. in 2011, reaching a historic length of time without one. Nonetheless, total damage for the season was $11 billion, and there were 120 fatalities.



Mario Tama // Getty Images

2012: Hurricane Sandy slams East Coast

– Named storms: 19 (8.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 10 (4.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

Hurricane Sandy impacted a total of 24 states, including all the states on the eastern seaboard. It is the fourth costliest storm in U.S. history. Sandy also led to three feet of snowfall in West Virginia and North Carolina.



Michele Eve Sandberg/Corbis via Getty Images

2013: A quiet hurricane season

– Named storms: 14 (3.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 2 (3.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 0 (2.52 less than average)

2013 had the quietest hurricane season of the previous 20 years. Hurricane Andrea was the only storm to make landfall in the U.S., touching down in Florida. Andrea caused 11 tornadoes, including in Florida and North Carolina.



Mark Wilson // Getty Images

2014: Arthur hits North Carolina early

– Named storms: 8 (3.00 less than average)
– Hurricanes: 6 (0.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

Since the start of accurate record-keeping in 1851, Hurricane Arthur is the earliest hurricane in the season to touch down in North Carolina. Arthur caused no fatalities and less than $25 million in damages.



Ellis/Anadolu Agency // Getty Images

2015: Ana reveals wrecked schooner

– Named storms: 11 (0.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 4 (1.91 less than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

Touching down in South Carolina on May 10, Tropical Storm Ana is the earliest tropical cyclone on record to make landfall. Along the beach, Ana’s winds revealed parts of a sunken schooner that was wrecked nearly 100 years earlier.



LINO BORGES/AFP via Getty Images

2016: A rare January hurricane

– Named storms: 15 (4.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 7 (1.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 4 (1.48 more than average)

The hurricane season started early in 2016, with January’s Hurricane Alex. Alex was the first hurricane to form in January since 1938. The storm hit the Azores, nine islands that are a part of Portugal, as a tropical storm.



Win McNamee // Getty Images

2017: Three costly hurricanes

– Named storms: 17 (6.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 10 (4.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 6 (3.48 more than average)

Within a single month, Hurricanes Harvey, Irma, and Maria hit the U.S. All three storms joined the list of the five costliest hurricanes in the U.S. Besides Katrina, Harvey is the only other hurricane to cause more than $100 billion in damages.



Joe Raedle // Getty Images

2018: Hurricane Michael hits Florida Panhandle

– Named storms: 15 (4.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 8 (2.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 2 (0.52 less than average)

Featuring sustained winds reaching 155 miles per hour, Hurricane Michael made landfall in Florida on Oct. 10 and caused at least 45 fatalities. Michael is the most intense hurricane to touch down along the Florida Panhandle.



Anadolu Agency // Getty Images

2019: Fourth year of frequent hurricanes

– Named storms: 18 (7.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 6 (0.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 3 (0.48 more than average)

There were more hurricanes than average in the Atlantic during the 2019 season, the fourth year in a row with this trend. Only one other four-year period can claim this record.



Mario Tama // Getty Images

2020: A record year for named storms

– Named storms: 30 (19.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 14 (8.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 7 (4.48 more than average)

2020 featured a record-breaking 30 named storms, marking the fifth consecutive year with more hurricanes than average in the Atlantic. It was also the second time in recorded history that the Greek alphabet was used to name storms after the initial list of 21 names was exhausted. 



Brandon Bell // Getty Images

2021: Hurricane Ida devastates Louisiana again

The Maldonado family travel by boat to their home after it flooded during Hurricane Ida on August 31, 2021 in Barataria, Louisiana

– Named storms: 21 (10.00 more than average)
– Hurricanes: 7 (1.09 more than average)
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: 4 (1.48 more than average)

The 2021 season started early and was the seventh year in a row that a named storm formed before hurricane season officially began on June 1, according to the NOAA. The worst storm of all though, Hurricane Ida, hit southeastern Louisiana at Category 4 strength in August, almost 16 years to the day after Hurricane Katrina slammed the same part of the state. Ida then moved inland, causing disastrous flooding and destructive tornadoes in the northeastern part of the U.S. as well. With 107 deaths tied to the hurricane and $75 billion in damage, Ida was named the deadliest and most destructive tropical cyclone of the 2021 season.



Erika Santelices // AFP via Getty Images

2022: Hurricane Fiona slams Puerto Rico

A youth rides his bicycle at the seaside in Nagua, Dominican Republic, on September 19, 2022, as Hurricane Fiona passes through the country.

– Named storms: TBD
– Hurricanes: TBD
– Category 3 or higher hurricanes: TBD

The 2022 hurricane season is still ongoing, but Hurricane Fiona is the current frontrunner for the worst storm of the season. The Category 4 hurricane wreaked havoc on Puerto Rico in mid-September, leaving much of the island without power and running water for days in its wake. The damage came only five years after Hurricane Maria caused destruction throughout the U.S. territory. Fiona then hit the Dominican Republic, Turks and Caicos, and as of Sept. 21, 2022, was expected to hit Bermuda and Canada next.


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