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Quiet 2025 Hurricane Season Offers Rare Respite for US Coasts
15 Oct
Summary
- No major hurricanes made US landfall in 2025 so far
- Dry air, high pressure, and shifting weather patterns kept storms away
- Experts warn the threat remains, with potential for "homegrown" late-season storms

In a surprising turn of events, the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season has remained remarkably quiet as of mid-October. For the first time in 10 years, no hurricane has made landfall in the United States through the end of September.
Experts say this is due to a combination of factors working against hurricane formation and movement. The atmosphere has been drier due to an influx of Saharan air, while a high-pressure system in the Gulf of Mexico has made conditions unfavorable for storms. Additionally, a shift in the North Atlantic oscillation, a key weather pattern, has pushed hurricanes away from the US East Coast and Gulf regions.
"There are storms," says Jill Trepanier, a hurricane climatologist at Louisiana State University. "They're just not making landfall." Three major hurricanes, Erin, Gabrielle, and Humberto, did intensify to Category 4 or 5 strength, but they remained over the open Atlantic.



