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2025 Atlantic Hurricane Season Ends with No U.S. Landing Hurricanes. What Happened?

The season had 13 named storms, including three Category 5 hurricanes, marking the second-highest number on record despite no U.S. hurricane landfalls, NOAA reported.

  • The 2025 Atlantic Hurricane Season concluded on November 30th with zero U.S. landfalls, producing 13 named storms, five hurricanes and four major hurricanes.
  • Preseason models signaled NOAA's June outlook predicted 13 to 19 named storms with about half becoming hurricanes and 3 to 5 major hurricanes.
  • Hurricane Melissa stood out by setting a 252 mph wind gust record, while Tropical Storm Chantal caused six deaths and collapsed over a dozen homes in the Carolinas.
  • Historic intensity is noted by three Category 5 hurricanes, the second-most on record behind the 2005 hurricane season, which produced four Category 5 storms.
  • The season's mix of outcomes suggests this year turned out average for the Atlantic basin but made history as unusual steering patterns kept storms offshore while enabling intense development.
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The Billings GazetteThe Billings Gazette
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Out of the storm

For the first time in a decade, every single U.S. state escaped the entire hurricane season without a direct hit from a hurricane.

·Billings, United States
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wtma.com broke the news in on Sunday, November 30, 2025.
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