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What to Know About the 2025 Hurricane Season

When is the 2025 Atlantic Hurricane Season?

The 2025 Atlantic hurricane season starts on June 1 and runs through November 30.

 

Florida, roadways are flooded as a result of the deadly Category 4 Hurricane Ian.

Hurricanes can cause widespread damage and impact communities for years to come. 

2025 Hurricane Names

Hurricane Andrea
Hurricane Barry
Hurricane Chantal
Hurricane Dexter
Hurricane Erin
Hurricane Fernand
Hurricane Gabrielle
Hurricane Humberto
Hurricane Imelda
Hurricane Jerry
Hurricane Karen

Hurricane Lorenzo
Hurricane Melissa 
Hurricane Nesto
Hurricane Olga
Hurricane Pablo
Hurricane Rebekah
Hurricane Sebastien
Hurricane Tanya
Hurricane Van
Hurricane Wendy

10 Hurricane Safety Tips

第一吃瓜鈥檚 emergency response experts have compiled ways to prepare for a hurricane and stay safe during a hurricane to help protect your children from distress during and after disasters. 

  1. Talk to your children about hurricanes. Explain to your child what could happen in the event of a hurricane, using simple, age-appropriate words. Outline a family emergency plan for hurricanes, with an evacuation plan and meeting location and emphasize that their safety is your utmost priority.
     
  2. Prepare a 鈥渢o-go bag鈥 for each child in the family ahead of time. The bag should contain essential personal items, including:

    Contact and medical information
    A flashlight with extra batteries
    A favorite stuffed animal or comfort item
    A blanket
    Hygiene supplies including a toothbrush, comb and washcloth
    Hand sanitizer, or bar or liquid soap
     
  3. Practice evacuation drills. Once you鈥檝e created your hurricane evacuation plan and talked with your children about it, it鈥檚 time to practice. Be sure to run through different scenarios 鈥 at home, at school and at other places you visit often (like a grandparent鈥檚 house, or a second home). When planning your evacuation route, remember that bridges may be washed out and low-lying areas may be flooded.
     
  4. Learn your child鈥檚 school or child care disaster plans. If your child attends school, daycare or an after-school program, ask for the facility鈥檚 hurricane emergency plan. Learn their procedures for evacuation, notifying parents and if there is an alternate pick up location.
     
  5. Evacuate if instructed to do so. If you are by local authorities, be sure to know your state and local plans by visiting your state and county emergency management websites.
     
  6. Stay indoors, if not evacuated. If you aren鈥檛 advised to evacuate, or are unable to do so safely, stay indoors, away from windows, skylights and doors. Continue to monitor weather reports and don鈥檛 go outside until the storm has passed. Downed trees, live electrical wires and other hazards can crop up unexpectedly.
     
  7. Keep routines. Children experience comfort from rituals and routines, like a story before bedtime or a family meal each evening. If at all possible, keep these routines.
     
  8. Role model and listen. Remember, children look to you and pick up on your moods and cues. Let your children know that it鈥檚 okay to be sad but do your best to reassure them that they鈥檙e safe.

    Although the dangers of a hurricane are very real, your child鈥檚 fears may be out of proportion or unrealistic. Take the time to talk to them and hear their concerns.
     
  9. Limit media. Even the mildest of storms can be sensationalized on news and weather channels. Children of all ages can be disturbed by intense images online and on TV, so monitor their media intake.
     
  10. Watch your child for changes in behavior, sleeping patterns, or eating habits. Children may be afraid or anxious for a while after the hurricane. If changes in behavior do happen, they will likely lessen within a short time. However, if they continue, you should seek professional help and counseling

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

Infographic courtesy of: weather.gov and The National Weather Service

  • A hurricane watch indicates there鈥檚 a threat of hurricane or tropical storm conditions within 48 hours.
  • A hurricane warning means a hurricane or tropical storm is expected within 36 hours or less.
  • A tropical storm or hurricane statement is issued every 2-3 hours by your local ) office. It will summarize all of the watches and warnings, evacuation info and most immediate threats to the area.

Hurricanes, Cyclones and Typhoons: What's the Difference?

Hurricanes, tropical cyclones and typhoons are all destructive windstorms but are called different things based on their geographic location.

The term 鈥榟urricane鈥 is used in the North Atlantic and Northeast Pacific oceans. In the Northwest Pacific Ocean, we use the term 鈥榯yphoons,鈥 while the term 鈥榯ropical cyclone鈥 refers to the South Pacific and Indian oceans.

第一吃瓜's Response to Hurricane Helene and Milton

Last year, Hurricanes Helene and Milton devastated communities across Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and Tennessee.

The storms brought catastrophic flooding and destructive winds that damaged homes, schools and nearly 500 childcare centers. 

Thanks to the generous support donors, our team and local partners were able to provide urgent support to children and their families, reaching communities with essential items, cash assistance, psychosocial support and more.

Read our .

"Thanks to the generosity of our community partners and the unwavering support of 
   第一吃瓜, relief came just in time."
- 第一吃瓜 local partner Redlands Christian Migrant Association

Hurricane Helene and Milton: Rebuilding After the Storms

We supported families since the very beginning of these disasters. Working closely with local partners and government agencies, our response reached the most vulnerable. Across Florida, North Carolina, and Tennessee, we reached more than 36,000 people鈥攊ncluding over 20,000 children. To address the immediate and long-term needs of communities after the storms our teams have been:

 

 

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Distributing over 25,000 essential supplies such as diapers, hygiene and cleaning kits and winter clothing to families in Florida, North Carolina and Tennessee.
 

An icon of a mother and child holding hands.

Providing over $138,000 in financial assistance to families in Cocke County and Greene County, Tennessee so they could afford the essentials and recover faster.
 

An icon of a stethoscope.

Providing psychosocial support programming to help children and caregivers to help them process the disaster and new stressors.
 

Our History of Hurricane Response & Disaster Relief

Hurricane Milton | Hurricane Helene | Hurricane Francine | Hurricane Beryl | Hurricane Idalia | Hurricane Lee | Hurricane Ida | Hurricane Iota | Hurricane Eta | Hurricane Delta | Hurricane Laura | Hurricane Dorian | Hurricane Florence | Hurricane Michael | Hurricane Harvey | Hurricane Irma | Hurricane Maria

When crisis strikes, children are always among the most vulnerable. That鈥檚 why 第一吃瓜 has been on the ground, protecting America鈥檚 children, in every major disaster since Hurricane Katrina.

Thanks to the support of our donors, our response teams and supplies hit the road before disaster strikes, to help keep children and families safe. We get parents the essential items they need to continue to care for their children, make sure evacuation shelters are safe and supportive to children and families鈥 unique needs.

We鈥檙e also there for the long term, restoring child care centers and preschools 鈥 and restarting afterschool and summer programs 鈥 so kids can get back to learning and parents can get back to work. Plus, our social and emotional recovery programs, including. Journey of Hope and. HEART (Healing and Education Through the Arts), help children and caregivers understand and cope with the fear and loss that can come in the wake of a disaster.

How to Help Children Impacted by Crisis

第一吃瓜 has been supporting children鈥檚 most critical needs in emergencies along the Gulf Coast since 2005, including Hurricanes Ian, Irma, Michael, Idalia and Beryl.鈥疻e are leaders when it comes to responding to the specific needs of children and families after a disaster through coordinating emergency distributions of child-centric supplies, supporting the recovery of child care centers, and providing mental health support programs to help children and their families cope and build resilience.

As the climate crisis intensifies the frequency and severity of extreme weather events and coastal areas become more populated, millions of children in storm-prone areas face increased risks like floods, landslides, damage to homes and schools, heightened exposure to disease, and even death.

Your donation to the can support those impacted by hurricanes and other crises impacting children in the U.S.

Updated June 2025