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Quiet 2025 Hurricane Season Offers Rare Respite for US Coasts

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
Quiet 2025 Hurricane Season Offers Rare Respite for US Coasts

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.

While the lack of major hurricane impacts may seem like good news, experts caution that the threat has not passed. The Atlantic typically begins to cool in late October, but the Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico remain warmer, leaving the possibility for "homegrown" late-season storms forming close to the coastline, as seen with Hurricane Milton last year.

"We're getting into the tail end of the season now, so the probability is really going down," says Charles Konrad of the Southeast Regional Climate Center. "But we can't rule it out."

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
The 2025 Atlantic hurricane season has been unusually quiet, with no major storms making landfall in the United States, due to a combination of factors including dry air from the Sahara, a high-pressure system in the Gulf of Mexico, and a shift in the North Atlantic oscillation weather pattern.
The North Atlantic oscillation is a pressure pattern in the Atlantic Ocean that helps direct a storm's path. In 2025, this pattern has shifted northward, driving hurricanes away from the US East Coast and Gulf regions, which experts say has contributed to the lack of major landfalls.
No, experts warn that the threat has not passed, as the Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico waters remain warm, leaving the possibility for "homegrown" late-season storms forming close to the coastline, similar to Hurricane Milton in 2024.

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