Note: This article may contain outdated information. It was published on Thursday, April 09, 2026.

Forecasters Predict 6 Major Hurricanes in 2026 Atlantic Season

The above-normal outlook warns Treasure Coast residents, from Sebastian Inlet to Stuart, to prepare amid ongoing recovery from recent storm damages.

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Flooded coastal area with palm trees and an occluded path post-storm damage in Florida.
Connor Scott McManus

The Atlantic hurricane season does not officially open until June 1, but the first major forecast for 2026 is already signaling trouble: six Atlantic hurricanes with major-storm intensity. The projection should focus the attention of every homeowner, marina operator, and emergency manager from Sebastian Inlet to Stuart.

The forecast predicts an above-normal season overall as Treasure Coast communities are still absorbing lessons from recent years of damaging storm activity. For a region that sits squarely in the crosshairs of storms tracking northward through the Bahamas or curling toward the Gulf, an early warning carries real weight.

Six major hurricanes — defined by the National Hurricane Center as Category 3 or stronger, with sustained winds of at least 111 mph — represents a threshold forecasters treat as a marker of a genuinely dangerous season, meteorologists said. The historical average for a full Atlantic season sits closer to three major hurricanes.

The Treasure Coast's vulnerability is structural. Martin, St. Lucie, and Indian River counties combine a long Atlantic-facing coastline with aging housing stock, a year-round population that skews older, and a waterway system — the Indian River Lagoon, the St. Lucie River, the C-44 canal — that can turn catastrophic storm surge into prolonged inland flooding.

Martin County Emergency Management and its counterparts in St. Lucie and Indian River counties typically begin public preparedness campaigns in April. Officials urge residents to assemble supply kits, review evacuation zones, and update flood insurance before the June 1 start of the official season — a deadline that, given this forecast, has new urgency.

Flood insurance renewals, which can take 30 days to take effect, should be initiated immediately, officials said in past seasons. Residents who wait until a named storm is in the forecast cone may find themselves uninsured when it matters most.

The season runs through November 30.

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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