List of Category 5 Atlantic hurricanes

A Category 5 Atlantic hurricane is a tropical cyclone that reaches Category 5 intensity on the Saffir–Simpson hurricane wind scale, within the Atlantic Ocean to the north of the equator. They are amongst the strongest tropical cyclones that can form on earth and have 1-minute sustained wind speeds of over 137 knots (254 km/h; 158 mph; 70 m/s). The United States National Hurricane Center currently estimates that a total of 36 tropical cyclones between 1851 and 2020, have peaked as a category 5 hurricane.

Hurricane Isabel, as seen from the International Space Station in September 2003

Background

Tracks of all known Category 5 Atlantic hurricanes between 1851 and 2019

Within the Atlantic Ocean to the north of the Equator, hurricanes are officially monitored by the United States's National Hurricane Center (NHC), however, other meteorological services, such as Meteo France, the United Kingdom's Met Office and Environment Canada also monitor the basin. Within the region, a Category 5 hurricane is considered to be a tropical cyclone that has 1-minute mean maximum sustained wind speeds of 137 knots (254 km/h; 158 mph; 70 m/s) or greater on the Saffir–Simpson hurricane wind scale at 10 metres (32.8 ft) above ground.[1]

A total of 36 tropical cyclones have been estimated to have peaked as a Category 5 hurricane on the SSHWS, with the first thought to have occurred during 1924. Officially, from 1924 to 2019, 36 Category 5 hurricanes have been recorded. No Category 5 hurricanes were observed officially before 1924. It can be presumed that earlier storms reached Category 5 strength over open waters, but the strongest winds were not measured. The anemometer, a device used for measuring wind speed, was invented in 1846. However, during major hurricane strikes, the instruments as a whole were often blown away, leaving the hurricane's peak intensity unrecorded. For example, as the Great Beaufort Hurricane of 1879 struck North Carolina, the anemometer cups were blown away when indicating 138 mph (222 km/h).[2]

An October Category 5 that hit Cuba in 1924

Officially, the decade with the most Category 5 hurricanes is 2000–2009, with eight Category 5 hurricanes having occurred: Isabel (2003), Ivan (2004), Emily (2005), Katrina (2005), Rita (2005), Wilma (2005), Dean (2007), and Felix (2007). The previous decades with the most Category 5 hurricanes were the 1930s and 1960s, with six occurring between 1930 and 1939 (before naming began).[3]

The most consecutive years to feature at least one Category 5 hurricane each is four, from 2016 to 2019. Six storms have reached that category in these years - Matthew, Irma, Maria, Michael, Dorian, and Lorenzo. Of these, Dorian had the highest winds, at 160 kn (185 mph; 295 km/h), while Maria had the lowest central pressure, at 908 mbar (26.81 inHg).[4]

Nine Atlantic hurricanes—Camille, Allen, Andrew, Isabel, Ivan, Dean, Felix, Irma and Maria—reached Category 5 intensity on more than one occasion; that is, by reaching Category 5 intensity, weakening to a Category 4 status or lower, and then becoming a Category 5 hurricane again. Such hurricanes have their dates shown together. Camille, Andrew, Dean, Felix, Irma, and Maria each attained Category 5 status twice during their lifespans. Allen, Isabel, and Ivan reached Category 5 intensity on three separate occasions. However, no Atlantic hurricane has reached Category 5 intensity more than three times during its lifespan. The 1932 Cuba hurricane holds the record for the most time spent as a Category 5 hurricane (although it took place before satellite or aircraft reconnaissance, so this record may be somewhat suspect). Irma holds the record for the longest continuous span as a Category 5 storm in the satellite era.[3][5]

Thirty-six Category 5 hurricanes have been recorded in the Atlantic basin since 1851, when records began. Only one Category 5 has been recorded in July, eight in August, twenty-one in September, six in October, and one in November. There have been no officially recorded June or off-season Category 5 hurricanes.[3]

The July and August Category 5 hurricanes reached their high intensities in both the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea. These are the areas most favorable for tropical cyclone development in those months.[3][6]

September sees the most Category 5 hurricanes, with over half of the total. This coincides with the climatological peak of the Atlantic hurricane season, which occurs in early September.[7] September Category 5s reached their strengths in any of the Gulf of Mexico, Caribbean Sea, and open Atlantic. These places are where September tropical cyclones are likely to form.[6] Many of these hurricanes are either Cape Verde-type storms, which develop their strength by having a great deal of open water; or so-called Bahama busters, which intensify over the warm Loop Current in the Gulf of Mexico.[8]

Six of the seven Category 5 hurricanes in October and November (the exception being Michael) reached their intensities in the western Caribbean, a region that Atlantic hurricanes strongly gravitate toward late in the season.[6] This is due to the climatology of the area, which sometimes has a high-altitude anticyclone that promotes rapid intensification late in the season, as well as warm waters.

Systems

Name Dates as a
Category 5
Duration as a
Category 5
Sustained
wind speeds
Pressure Areas affected Deaths Damage
(USD)
Refs
"Cuba"October 19, 192412 hours165 mph (270 km/h)910 hPa (26.87 inHg)Central America, Mexico, Cuba
Florida, The Bahamas
90[9]
"San Felipe II
Okeechobee"
September 13–14, 192812 hours160 mph (260 km/h)929 hPa (27.43 inHg)Lesser Antilles, The Bahamas
United States East Coast, Atlantic Canada
4,000$100 million
"Bahamas"September 5–6, 19321 day160 mph (260 km/h)921 hPa (27.20 inHg)The Bahamas, Northeastern United States16
"Camaguey"November 5–8, 19323 days 6 hours175 mph (280 km/h)915 hPa (27.02 inHg)Lesser Antilles, Jamaica, Cayman Islands
Cuba, The Bahamas, Bermuda
3,103$40 million
"Cuba–Brownsville"August 30, 193312 hours160 mph (260 km/h)930 hPa (27.46 inHg)The Bahamas, Cuba, Florida
Texas, Tamaulipas
179$27.9 million
"Tampico"September 21, 193312 hours160 mph (260 km/h)929 hPa (27.43 inHg)Jamaica, Yucatán Peninsula184$5 million
"Labor Day"September 3, 193518 hours185 mph (295 km/h)892 hPa (26.34 inHg)The Bahamas, Florida, Georgia
The Carolinas, Virginia
408
"New England"September 19–20, 193818 hours160 mph (260 km/h)940 hPa (27.76 inHg)Eastern United States, Southwestern Quebec682$306 million
CarolSeptember 3, 195312 hours160 mph (260 km/h)929 hPa (27.43 inHg)Bermuda, New England, Atlantic Canada5$2 million
JanetSeptember 27–28, 195518 hours175 mph (280 km/h)914 hPa (26.99 inHg)Lesser Antilles, Central America1,023$65.8 million[10]
CarlaSeptember 17, 196118 hours175 mph (281 km/h)931 hPa (27.49 inHg)Central Texas coast7$6 million
HattieOctober 31, 19616 hours165 mph (270 km/h)914 hPa (26.99 inHg)Central America319$60.3 million[11][12]
BeulahSeptember 20, 196718 hours160 mph (260 km/h)923 hPa (27.26 inHg)The Caribbean, Mexico, Texas59$208 million[13]
CamilleAugust 16–18, 1969 1 day 6 hours175 mph (280 km/h)900 hPa (26.58 inHg)Cuba, United States Gulf Coast259$1.42 billion[14]
EdithSeptember 9, 19716 hours160 mph (260 km/h)943 hPa (27.85 inHg)The Caribbean, Central America
Mexico, United States Gulf Coast
37$25.4 million
AnitaSeptember 2, 197712 hours175 mph (280 km/h)926 hPa (27.34 inHg)Mexico11Extensive[15]
DavidAugust 30–31, 19791 day 18 hours175 mph (280 km/h)924 hPa (27.29 inHg)The Caribbean, United States East coast2,068$1.54 billion[16][17]
AllenAugust 5–9, 1980 3 days190 mph (305 km/h)899 hPa (26.55 inHg)The Caribbean, Yucatán Peninsula
Mexico, South Texas
269$1.24 billion[16][18][19]
GilbertSeptember 13–14, 19881 day185 mph (295 km/h)888 hPa (26.22 inHg)Jamaica, Venezuela, Central America
Hispaniola, Mexico
318$7.1 billion[20][21]
HugoSeptember 15, 19896 hours160 mph (260 km/h)918 hPa (27.11 inHg)The Caribbean, United States East Coast107$10 billion[14][22][23]
AndrewAugust 23–24, 1992 16 hours175 mph (280 km/h)922 hPa (27.23 inHg)The Bahamas, Florida, United States Gulf Coast65$26.5 billion[14][24]
MitchOctober 26–28, 19981 day 18 hours180 mph (285 km/h)905 hPa (26.72 inHg)Central America, Yucatán Peninsula, South Florida19,325$6.2 billion[25][26][27][28]
IsabelSeptember 11–14, 2003 1 day 18 hours165 mph (270 km/h)915 hPa (27.02 inHg)Greater Antilles, Bahamas
Eastern United States, Ontario
51$5.37 billion[14][29]
IvanSeptember 9–14, 2004 2 days 12 hours165 mph (270 km/h)910 hPa (26.87 inHg)The Caribbean, Venezuela, United States Gulf Coast124$23.3 billion[14][30]
EmilyJuly 16, 20056 hours160 mph (260 km/h)929 hPa (27.43 inHg)Windward Islands, Jamaica, Mexico, Texas17$1.01 billion[31]
KatrinaAugust 28–29, 200518 hours175 mph (280 km/h)902 hPa (26.64 inHg)Bahamas, United States Gulf Coast1,836$125 billion[32]
RitaSeptember 21–22, 20051 day180 mph (285 km/h)895 hPa (26.43 inHg)Cuba, United States Gulf Coast125$12 billion[33]
WilmaOctober 19, 200518 hours185 mph (295 km/h)882 hPa (26.05 inHg)Greater Antilles, Central America, Florida87$29.4 billion[34][35][36][37]
DeanAugust 18–21, 2007 1 day175 mph (280 km/h)905 hPa (26.72 inHg)The Caribbean, Central America45$1.76 billion[16][38][39]
FelixSeptember 3–4, 2007 1 day175 mph (280 km/h)929 hPa (27.43 inHg)Nicaragua, Honduras133$720 million[40][41][42][43]
MatthewOctober 1, 201612 hours165 mph (270 km/h)934 hPa (27.58 inHg)Antilles, Venezuela, Colombia
United States East Coast, Atlantic Canada
603$15.1 billion[44]
IrmaSeptember 5–9, 2017 3 days180 mph (285 km/h)914 hPa (26.99 inHg)Cape Verde, The Caribbean, Virgin Islands
Cuba, Florida
138$64.8 billion[45]
MariaSeptember 18–20, 2017 1 day 4 hours
15 minutes
175 mph (280 km/h)908 hPa (26.81 inHg)Lesser Antilles, Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico
Dominican Republic, Turks and Caicos Islands
3,057$91.6 billion[46]
MichaelOctober 10, 201830 minutes160 mph (260 km/h)919 hPa (27.14 inHg)Central America, United States Gulf Coast74$25.1 billion
DorianSeptember 1–2, 20191 day 6 hours185 mph (295 km/h)910 hPa (26.87 inHg)Barbados, Lesser Antilles, Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, The Bahamas, United States East Coast, Atlantic Canada, Greenland84$4.68 billion[47]
LorenzoSeptember 29, 20193 hours160 mph (260 km/h)925 hPa (27.32 inHg)Cabo Verde, Azores, Western Europe19$362 million
Overall reference for Name, dates, duration, winds and pressure:[3]
†Discontinuous duration (weakened below Category 5 then restrengthened to that classification at least once)

Other systems


Officially, from 1924 to 2019, 36 Category 5 hurricanes have been recorded. No Category 5 hurricanes were observed officially before 1924. It can be presumed that earlier storms reached Category 5 strength over open waters, but the strongest winds were not measured. The anemometer, a device used for measuring wind speed, was invented in 1846. However, during major hurricane strikes, the instruments as a whole were often blown away, leaving the hurricane's peak intensity unrecorded. For example, as the Great Beaufort Hurricane of 1879 struck North Carolina, the anemometer cups were blown away when indicating 138 mph (222 km/h).[2]


As of May 2018, a reanalysis of weather data was ongoing by researchers who may upgrade or downgrade other Atlantic hurricanes currently listed at Categories 4 and 5.[48] For example, the 1825 Santa Ana hurricane is suspected to have reached Category 5 strength.[49] Furthermore, paleotempestological research aims to identify past major hurricanes by comparing sedimentary evidence of recent and past hurricane strikes. For example, a "giant hurricane" significantly more powerful than Hurricane Hattie (Category 5) has been identified in Belizean sediment, having struck the region sometime before 1500.[50]

Listed by month

Landfalls

Hurricane Michael as it was making landfall as a Category 5 hurricane in 2018

With the exception of Hurricane Lorenzo, which did not make landfall but still brought hurricane-force winds to the Azores, all Atlantic Category 5 hurricanes have made landfall at some location as a hurricane, and all but four of those (Carol, Esther, Mitch and Isabel) made landfall at some location at major hurricane strength. Most Category 5 hurricanes in the Atlantic make landfall because of their proximity to land in the Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico, where the usual synoptic weather patterns carry them towards land, as opposed to the westward, oceanic mean track of Eastern Pacific hurricanes.[51] Seventeen of the storms made landfall at least once while at Category 5 intensity;[3] 2007 and 2017 are the only years in which two storms made landfall at this intensity.[3]

Many of these systems made landfall shortly after weakening from a Category 5 hurricane. This weakening can be caused by dry air near land, shallower waters due to shelving, interaction with land, replacement of its eyewalls, or cooler waters near shore.[32] In southern Florida, the return period for a Category 5 hurricane is roughly once every 50 years.[52]

The following table lists these hurricanes by landfall intensity. As Lorenzo did not make landfall, it is omitted.

Name Year
Category 5
Category 4
Category 3
Category 2
Category 1
Tropical or subtropical storm
Tropical or subtropical depression
References
"Cuba"1924CubaFloridaThe Bahamas[3][53]
"Okeechobee"1928Puerto RicoGuadeloupe,
Turks and Caicos Islands, The Bahamas
& Florida
South Carolina
"Bahamas"1932The Bahamas
"Cuba"1932Little Cayman & CubaThe BahamasMartinique
"Cuba–Brownsville"1933The BahamasCuba & Texas
"Tampico"1933Yucatán PeninsulaMainland Mexico
"Labor Day"1935Florida KeysNorthwest FloridaThe Bahamas
"New England"1938New York & Connecticut
Carol1953New Brunswick
Janet1955Yucatán PeninsulaMainland Mexico
Esther1961Massachusetts & Maine
Hattie1961BelizeMexico
Beulah1967TexasYucatán Peninsula
Camille1969Louisiana & MississippiCuba
Edith1971NicaraguaLouisianaBelize & Mexico
Anita1977Mexico
David1979Dominican RepublicDominicaFloridaCuba, The Bahamas, & Georgia
Allen1980Texas & Barbados
Gilbert1988Quintana RooJamaica & Tamaulipas[20]
Hugo1989Guadeloupe, Saint Croix, & South CarolinaPuerto Rico[22]
Andrew1992Eleuthera & FloridaBerry IslandsLouisiana[24]
Mitch1998HondurasCampeche & Florida[25]
Isabel2003North Carolina[29]
Ivan2004Alabama, GrenadaLouisiana[30]
Emily2005Quintana RooTamaulipasGrenada[31]
Katrina2005Louisiana & MississippiFlorida[32]
Rita2005Louisiana[33]
Wilma2005Cozumel & Quintana RooFlorida[34]
Dean2007Quintana RooVeracruz[38]
Felix2007NicaraguaGrenada[40]
Matthew2016Haiti, Cuba & Grand BahamaSouth Carolina[44]
Irma2017Barbuda, Saint Martin, British Virgin Islands & CubaLittle Inagua & Florida KeysSouthwest Florida[45]
Maria2017DominicaPuerto Rico[54]
Michael2018Florida
Dorian2019Abaco Islands & Grand Bahama (twice)North CarolinaSt. ThomasSaint Lucia & Barbados

See also

References

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