When it comes to hurricanes, Florida stands out like a sore thumb. In 2024, three hurricanes landed in Florida: two in the Big Bend and one on the West Coast. Florida's narrow width allows it to feel the impacts over extensive and populous areas, and effects can vary significantly within a short distance. Its flat terrain also enables hurricanes to maintain their structure and strength more effectively than if a cyclone were to cross mountainous terrain.

No other state in the country has more hurricane landfalls per year on average than Florida. Nearly 40% of all hurricanes that strike the United States make landfall in Florida.

Hurricane season begins June 1 and runs through November 30. At the beginning of the season, more disorganized storms often impact the state, mainly coming from the west. This means that Florida is on the messy side of the storm, the most active side. These storms, either forming in June or preseason, can cause significant rain events and tornadoes as the rainbands travel over the region. Later in the season, storms tend to brew in the Caribbean, and toward the peak of the season, between August and October, there tends to be more activity from African waves. These storms are often monitored for several days, if not weeks, contributing to the public's tropical activity fatigue. Not all storms make it to Florida or even the United States; many curve northward before coming close to the Americas. Toward the end of the season, the formation areas retract again, and storms tend to be born "closer to home," usually from a lingering front or low-pressure system. These kinds of storms need to be closely monitored, like the ones at the beginning of the season. They can be named one moment and then make landfall the next day.

Average Tropical Activity by month

Remember that a storm doesn't have to be officially named to impact an area significantly. If an area is already vulnerable and, for example, a disorganized system is moving slowly, this can wreak havoc and cause lots of water damage, flooding, and even deaths. It is often the misconception that wind is the most dangerous part of a hurricane, but water is the factor that causes the most fatalities. Freshwater flooding, meaning flooding due to rain, has caused 57% of the deaths between 2013 and 2022. Surf and rip currents account for 15%, wind 12%, and storm surge 11%. Before the recent decade, between 1963 and 2012, storm surges accounted for 49% of the deaths, freshwater flooding took 27%, and wind was 8%. The atmosphere is holding more water vapor with the increased global temperatures; therefore, anything that goes up must come down, often in the form of heavier downpours, in this case, in tropical systems.

You can hide from the wind but must run from the water.

Climate Connections / Michael Lowry

Direct deaths from U.S. tropical cyclones

Flooding tips:

Flooding in Tampa after Hurricane Debby.

While there is a wide range of impacts during the storm's passage, such as lightning, wind damage, tornadoes, flooding, erosion, and high surf -- the latter could last even after its passage— there are also many deaths, indirectly, after a storm passes, often due to carbon monoxide poisoning, and performing unsafe cleanup duties (including electrocution), and car accidents. So be careful when you keep up after a hurricane or tropical storm; there could be latent threats.

Hurricane season preparedness tips:

Differences between a warning and watch

Know the terminology:

How do storms get named?

A tropical low-pressure system must be at least a tropical storm (or subtropical) to receive an official name. The names come from a list that rotates every six years. They could be Spanish, French, or American. This is done intentionally to serve better this region, which hurricanes impact.

Even-number years start with male names, while uneven years start with female names. However, it wasn’t always like this. Before satellites existed, storms usually received their names depending on the regions they impacted, saints, or holidays. The names were generally given after the event. Storms started getting official names in 1953, but only female names. By 1979, the lists were updated, and alternating male names were added. The six lists of names were officially implemented.

You will no longer see Greek letters if we use all the names on the list in a season. The National Hurricane Center, along with the World Meteorological Organization, which handles the adding and retiring of names, has a supplemental list of names that will kick in any year all names are used. This supplemental list of names will be used every year. If one name is retired from the list due to the storm being catastrophic and costly and meeting the retirement criteria, it would be replaced like any other storm retired from the rotating lists.

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