Whether you are tracking an active tropical cyclone today or analyzing 150 years of historical storm data, one meteorological truth remains constant: water—not wind—is the true silent killer. In the interactive map below, you can monitor current global storms in real-time alongside a curated database of the most significant cyclonic events in history.
By mapping live, active feeds over historical storm tracks across the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian Ocean basins, clear patterns emerge: the deadliest cyclones are rarely the strongest by wind speed. Instead, they are storms that combine slow movement, coastal geography, storm surge amplification, and extreme rainfall.
This page is not a simple list of storms. It is a global synthesis of hurricane trajectories, impacts, and mechanisms—pairing up-to-the-minute situational awareness from the NHC and JTWC with a deep historical archive built from NOAA, IBTrACS, and national meteorological agencies. The goal is to show how hurricane behavior has evolved, where active threats are right now, and why certain tracks repeatedly produce catastrophic outcomes.
“Hurricane,” “typhoon,” and “tropical cyclone” describe the same atmospheric system: a rotating low-pressure core powered by latent heat released from warm ocean waters. The terminology changes by region, but the underlying dynamics remain identical.
Understanding storm tracks—rather than just peak wind speeds—is essential for evaluating risk. Track geometry determines whether a storm stalls, accelerates, or repeatedly re-intensifies over warm water before landfall.
Impacts: The SSHWS rates wind only. Most deaths and damage often come from storm surge and freshwater flooding.
Hurricane categories are often misunderstood as a measure of overall danger. In reality, the Saffir–Simpson scale ranks storms solely by sustained wind speed, not by flooding potential, storm surge, or societal impact. Many of the deadliest hurricanes in history were not Category 5 storms.
Below is the official wind-based classification system used by NOAA and the National Hurricane Center, based on 1-minute sustained winds at 10 meters above ground level.
| Category | 1-min sustained wind |
|---|---|
| Cat 1 | 74–95 mph (64–82 kt) |
| Cat 2 | 96–110 mph (83–95 kt) |
| Cat 3 | 111–129 mph (96–112 kt) |
| Cat 4 | 130–156 mph (113–136 kt) |
| Cat 5 | ≥ 157 mph (≥ 137 kt) |
Source: NOAA/NHC.
The U.S. (NHC/JTWC) reports 1-minute sustained winds, often in knots for operational marine use. Many WMO members (e.g., JMA) use 10-minute sustained winds. A common (approximate) conversion from 1-min to 10-min is ×0.88, but agency methods differ; always compare within the same averaging period.
Tropical cyclones do not behave the same way in every part of the world. Each ocean basin has distinct storm tracks, coastal geography, and population patterns that shape how hurricanes evolve and how deadly they become.
The storms below are not simply the strongest by wind speed—they are the most consequential in terms of human impact, economic loss, and meteorological significance. Together, they reveal how regional dynamics determine whether a cyclone becomes a historic catastrophe or a relatively contained event.
Data notes: Fatality and damage estimates—especially before the satellite era—vary across historical sources and national meteorological agencies. Where uncertainty exists, ranges are shown. Dollar figures are typically reported in nominal values for the year of impact; U.S. losses use NOAA/NCEI inflation-adjusted estimates where available.
The North Indian Ocean is the most lethal tropical cyclone basin in the world. Although it produces fewer storms than the Atlantic or Western Pacific, its geography, shallow coastal shelves, and dense coastal populations make it uniquely vulnerable to catastrophic storm surge and flooding.
Historic cyclone tracks in the Bay of Bengal show a recurring pattern: storms intensify over warm waters and then funnel toward low-lying delta regions in Bangladesh, eastern India, and Myanmar. This combination of track geometry and topography explains why the deadliest cyclones in recorded history have occurred here.
| Storm (Country) | Year | Peak wind (mph, 1-min if available) | Fatalities | Primary cause | Landfall date(s) | Estimated loss (USD) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bhola cyclone (Bangladesh/then-East Pakistan) | 1970 | ~115 | 300,000–500,000 | Storm surge & flooding | Nov 12–13 | — | Deadliest tropical cyclone on record. |
| Backerganj cyclone (Bangladesh) | 1876 | — | ~200,000 | Storm surge | Oct 31 | — | Historic 19th-century event in Bay of Bengal. |
| Bangladesh cyclone | 1991 | ~160 | ~138,000 | Storm surge | Apr 29–30 | ~$1.7B | Chittagong area hardest hit. |
| Cyclone Nargis (Myanmar) | 2008 | ~115 | ~138,000 | Storm surge & flooding | May 2–3 | ~$10–13B | Irrawaddy Delta devastation. |
| Odisha super cyclone (India) | 1999 | ~160 | ~10,000 | Storm surge & wind | Oct 29–31 | ~$4.4B | Category 5 at peak. |
The Western North Pacific is the most active tropical cyclone basin on Earth, producing more typhoons than any other region. Warm ocean waters, favorable atmospheric circulation, and long overwater tracks allow storms to reach extreme intensity before approaching East and Southeast Asia.
Unlike the Bay of Bengal, where storm surge dominates mortality, Western Pacific disasters are often driven by a combination of intense winds, torrential rainfall, landslides, and river flooding. Historic typhoon tracks show repeated impact corridors affecting China, Japan, the Philippines, Vietnam, and Taiwan—regions where geography and urbanization amplify damage.
| Storm (Country) | Year | Peak wind | Fatalities | Primary cause | Landfall date(s) | Estimated loss | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Swatow typhoon (China) | 1922 | — | ~50,000+ | Storm surge | Aug 2 | — | Historic catastrophic surge near Shantou. |
| Haiphong typhoon (Vietnam) | 1881 | — | ~>20,000 (uncertain) | Storm surge | Oct 8 | — | High but uncertain 19th-century toll. |
| Typhoon Nina (China) | 1975 | ~115 | ~26,000+ (dam-failure floods) | Flooding | Aug 3–8 | — | Banqiao/Shimantan dam disasters. |
| Typhoon Vera (Japan) | 1959 | ~160 | ~5,000+ | Storm surge & flooding | Sep 26 | ~$2.6B (1959 USD) | “Isewan” typhoon. |
| Typhoon Haiyan (Philippines) | 2013 | ~195 (1-min) | ~7,300 | Storm surge & wind | Nov 8 | ~$11–15B | One of the strongest landfalls on record. |
| Typhoon Hagibis (Japan) | 2019 | ~160 | ~100 | Flooding | Oct 12 | ~$8–10B | Widespread river flooding in Honshu. |
The North Atlantic basin is the most studied and economically consequential hurricane region in the world. Although it produces fewer storms than the Western Pacific, its hurricanes frequently strike highly developed coastlines, making it responsible for some of the costliest natural disasters in history.
Historic Atlantic hurricane tracks reveal recurring corridors of risk across the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and U.S. East Coast. In this basin, catastrophe is often shaped less by peak wind speed than by storm surge, rainfall, and infrastructure vulnerability—factors that have turned storms like Galveston (1900), Mitch (1998), Katrina (2005), and Harvey (2017) into defining disasters.
| Storm (Country/Region) | Year | Peak wind | Fatalities | Primary cause | Landfall date(s) | Estimated loss | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Great Hurricane (Lesser Antilles) | 1780 | — | ~22,000–27,500 | Wind & surge | Oct 10–16 | — | Deadliest known Atlantic hurricane. |
| Great Galveston (U.S.) | 1900 | ~145 | ~8,000–12,000 | Storm surge | Sep 8 | — | Deadliest U.S. natural disaster. |
| Okeechobee (Florida) | 1928 | ~160 | ~2,500–3,000 | Lake surge | Sep 17–18 | — | Levee overtop around Lake Okeechobee. |
| Mitch (C.America) | 1998 | ~180 | ~11,000–19,000 | Floods & landslides | Oct 29–Nov 1 | ~$6B | Devastated Honduras & Nicaragua. |
| Katrina (U.S.) | 2005 | ~175 | ~1,833 | Storm surge & levee failures | Aug 29 | ~$201B (NOAA, CPI-adj.) | Costliest U.S. hurricane. |
| Harvey (U.S.) | 2017 | ~130 | ~100+ | Extreme rainfall | Aug 25–30 | ~$159–160B | Historic Houston floods. |
| Maria (Caribbean) | 2017 | ~175 | ~3,000 (PR est.) | Wind & infrastructure loss | Sep 18–20 | ~$115B (NOAA) | Severe Puerto Rico impacts. |
| Ian (U.S.) | 2022 | ~155 | ~150+ | Storm surge & wind | Sep 28–30 | ~$120B (NOAA) | Florida west coast landfall. |
The South-West Indian Ocean basin is characterized by powerful cyclones that frequently affect Madagascar, Mozambique, and surrounding countries. This region’s warm coastal waters and complex coastline contribute to intense storms that often produce devastating flooding and storm surge in vulnerable communities.
Cyclone tracks in this basin frequently lead to repeated landfalls, compounding damage across multiple countries and exacerbating humanitarian crises. The combination of physical geography and socio-economic factors makes this basin a hotspot for some of Africa’s most severe tropical cyclone disasters.
| Storm | Year | Peak wind | Fatalities | Primary cause | Landfall date(s) | Estimated loss | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cyclone Idai (Mozambique/Zimbabwe/Malawi) | 2019 | ~125 | ~1,300 | Flooding & surge | Mar 14–15 | ~$3.3B | One of Africa’s worst weather disasters. |
| Cyclone Freddy (multiple) | 2023 | ~165 | ~1,400+ | Flooding | Feb–Mar | ~$1.53B | Record-long-lived; repeated landfalls. |
| Cyclone Gafilo (Madagascar) | 2004 | ~160 | ~363 | Wind & flooding | Mar 7 | ~$250M+ | Very intense, widespread damage. |
| Cyclone Chido (Mayotte/Mozambique) | 2024 | ~155 | ~173+ | Wind & some flooding | Dec 15 | ~$3.9B | Very intense, widespread damage. |
The South Pacific and Australian region experiences tropical cyclones that often impact island nations and coastal Australia, where storm tracks are influenced by complex ocean-atmosphere interactions. These cyclones can bring intense winds, heavy rainfall, and destructive storm surge, posing serious risks to small island communities and extensive coastal ecosystems.
Due to the region’s diverse geography—from coral atolls to rugged coastlines—cyclone impacts vary widely, with some storms causing widespread devastation and others producing more localized effects. Historical tracks demonstrate how storm behavior and landfall patterns shape the vulnerability of this expansive basin.
| Storm | Year | Peak wind | Fatalities | Primary cause | Landfall date(s) | Estimated loss | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cyclone Mahina (Australia) | 1899 | — | ~300–900 (est.) | Storm surge | Mar 4–5 | — | Historic surge event; uncertain toll. |
| Cyclone Tracy (Australia) | 1974 | ~135 | 71 | Wind | Dec 24–25 | ~$800M (1974 USD) | Destroyed much of Darwin. |
| Cyclone Yasi (Australia) | 2011 | ~155 | 1 | Wind & surge | Feb 3 | ~A$3.5B | Severe economic losses in QLD. |
| Cyclone Evan (Samoa) | 2012 | ~115 | 1 | Wind & surge | Dec 13 | ~US$204M | Severe building losses in Samoa. |
| Cyclone Pam (Vanuatu) | 2015 | ~165 | ~15–20 | Wind & surge | Mar 13–14 | ~$600M+ | Devastated Vanuatu. |
The Eastern North Pacific basin is one of the most active tropical cyclone regions globally, producing numerous storms that often threaten the western coast of Mexico and Central America. Though many storms remain offshore, those that make landfall can bring intense winds, heavy rains, and deadly flooding, especially in mountainous terrain.
This basin is also known for rapid intensification events, where storms quickly strengthen over warm ocean waters before reaching land, sometimes catching communities off guard. Historical tracks reveal patterns of landfall and movement critical for understanding regional cyclone risks and impacts.
| Storm | Year | Peak wind | Fatalities | Primary cause | Landfall date(s) | Estimated loss | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1959 Mexico hurricane (Colima/Jalisco) | 1959 | ~160 | ~1,500–1,800 | Surge & wind | Oct 27–29 | — | Deadliest known E. Pac. landfall. |
| Hurricane Pauline (Mexico) | 1997 | ~115 | ~200–300 | Flooding & landslides | Oct 9–10 | ~$7.5B (est.) | Guerrero/Oaxaca impacts. |
| Hurricane Otis (Acapulco) | 2023 | ~165 | ~50+ | Wind | Oct 25 | ~$16–20B | Explosive RI into Cat 5 at landfall. |
The South Atlantic basin is an exceptionally rare environment for tropical cyclone formation, due to cooler sea surface temperatures and unfavorable wind shear. Nevertheless, sporadic storms like Hurricane Catarina in 2004 have demonstrated that significant cyclones can occasionally develop, posing unexpected threats to coastal regions of Brazil and neighboring areas.
Because these events are so infrequent, historical data is limited, but their impacts underscore the importance of monitoring even atypical cyclone activity in this basin.
| Storm | Year | Peak wind | Fatalities | Primary cause | Landfall | Estimated loss | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hurricane Catarina (Brazil) | 2004 | ~100 | ~3 | Wind | Mar 28 | ~$350M | Rare South Atlantic hurricane. |
Data Note: Historical figures vary by source (EM-DAT, national agencies, reanalyses) and are often estimated ranges subject to revision. Live tropical cyclone tracking is sourced from official NOAA, NHC, and JTWC data feeds via Esri; real-time positions and intensities are preliminary and subject to post-storm updates.
Map Copyright: 2026 cccarto.com
Data Source: NOAA