Treasure Coast residents urged to prepare now as federal forecasters prepare to unveil storm predictions for the coming season
The question that shapes every summer on the Treasure Coast — how bad will hurricane season be? — is about to get an official answer.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is preparing to release its 2026 Atlantic Hurricane Season Outlook, an annual forecast that sets the tone for emergency managers, insurance adjusters, marina operators, and the roughly 700,000 residents who live along Martin, St. Lucie, and Indian River counties' exposed coastline.
The outlook, expected imminently from NOAA's Climate Prediction Center, will project the number of named storms, hurricanes, and major hurricanes — Category 3 or stronger — that forecasters anticipate between June 1 and November 30, according to NOAA's official announcement.
The Treasure Coast sits in one of Florida's most vulnerable corridors. The region has absorbed direct hits and near-misses in recent years, and even a glancing blow from a major storm can push catastrophic surge into the Indian River Lagoon, flood low-lying neighborhoods in Fort Pierce, and cut power to tens of thousands of homes for weeks.
Last year's outlook warned of an above-normal season, a pattern driven in part by record-warm Atlantic sea surface temperatures that meteorologists say have not meaningfully cooled.
NOAA forecasters use sea surface temperature trends, wind shear patterns, and the status of El Niño or La Niña cycles to build their probability ranges. Those same oceanic conditions that fuel the lagoon's algae blooms in summer also feed tropical development in the Atlantic basin.
NOAA will publish the full outlook details at noaa.gov. Treasure Coast residents can begin preparedness steps now — including assembling supply kits, reviewing evacuation zones at their county emergency management office, and confirming flood insurance coverage — without waiting for the official numbers.
This article was generated with AI assistance using publicly available information. It was reviewed and approved by a human editor before publication. TC Sentinel uses AI writing tools in accordance with FTC guidelines.
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