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Hurricane & Typhoon Tracker

Live status of active tropical cyclones from the National Hurricane Center (Atlantic + Eastern Pacific) and the Joint Typhoon Warning Center (Western Pacific, Indian Ocean, Southern Hemisphere). Updates every 15 minutes.

Active Storms

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Season Status

Tracking Cams

Satellite + radar feeds we capture 24/7. Click through for time-lapses.

Data: NHC · JTWC · Auto-refreshes every 15 minutes

About This Tracker

This page pulls live tropical cyclone data from the two official global tropical weather agencies: the National Hurricane Center (NHC), operated by NOAA, which monitors the North Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico, Caribbean, and Eastern and Central Pacific; and the Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC), operated by the US Navy, which covers the Western Pacific, Indian Ocean, and Southern Hemisphere. Together they provide 24/7 tracking of every named tropical cyclone on Earth.

Each active storm card shows the classification (tropical depression, tropical storm, hurricane, typhoon, or cyclone), basin, maximum sustained wind speed in knots, current movement, and when available, the official 5-day cone graphic issued by the responsible agency. The Season Status section shows which basins are currently in their active season window.

The Tracking Cams below the storm list are Port of Cams satellite feeds we capture 24/7 — GOES-19 Full Disk East, GOES-18 Full Disk West, GOES Hawaii Sector, JAXA Himawari Pacific, and NOAA CONUS radar. Click any cam to watch live and browse time-lapses going back weeks.

Hurricane Season Dates by Basin

North Atlantic
NHC · June 1 – November 30
Peak: Aug–Oct
Eastern Pacific
NHC · May 15 – November 30
Peak: Jul–Sep
Central Pacific (Hawaii)
NHC / CPHC · June 1 – November 30
Peak: Jul–Sep
Western Pacific
JTWC · Year-round
Peak: Jul–Nov
North Indian Ocean
JTWC · Apr–Jun, Oct–Dec
Peak: Oct–Nov
Southern Hemisphere
JTWC · Nov 1 – Apr 30
Peak: Jan–Mar

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between a hurricane watch and a hurricane warning? +

A hurricane watch means hurricane conditions (sustained winds of 74 mph or higher) are possible within a specified area within 48 hours. A hurricane warning means hurricane conditions are expected within 36 hours. When a warning is issued, all preparations should be completed immediately — don't wait.

What is the difference between a hurricane and a typhoon? +

Both are tropical cyclones with sustained winds of 74 mph or greater. The name depends on location: 'hurricane' is used in the North Atlantic and Eastern Pacific, 'typhoon' in the Western Pacific, and 'cyclone' in the Indian Ocean and Southern Hemisphere. Same storm, different name.

Which ocean basins does this tracker monitor? +

All 6 official basins: North Atlantic (Gulf of Mexico + Caribbean), Eastern Pacific (off Mexico), Central Pacific (Hawaii region), Western Pacific (Japan, Philippines, China), North Indian Ocean, and the Southern Hemisphere (Indian Ocean + South Pacific). Atlantic and Eastern Pacific data comes from the National Hurricane Center (NHC); all other basins from the Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC).

How often does the hurricane tracker update? +

The page refreshes every 15 minutes. The NHC issues official advisories every 6 hours during normal operation and every 3 hours when a storm is threatening land. The JTWC issues advisories every 6 hours. Intermediate public advisories are issued every 3 hours for all active threats.

When is hurricane season? +

Atlantic: June 1 – November 30 (peak: mid-August to mid-October). Eastern Pacific: May 15 – November 30. Central Pacific (Hawaii): June 1 – November 30. Western Pacific typhoons: year-round (peak: July–November). The Western Pacific is the most active basin on Earth, generating roughly one-third of all tropical cyclones.

What is the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale? +

A 1–5 rating based on sustained wind speed only. Cat 1: 74–95 mph (some damage to well-constructed homes). Cat 2: 96–110 mph (extensive damage). Cat 3: 111–129 mph (devastating damage — considered a major hurricane). Cat 4: 130–156 mph (catastrophic damage). Cat 5: 157+ mph (catastrophic — complete structural failure likely). Storm surge, flooding, and tornadoes are assessed separately and are often responsible for the most deaths.