Bazaar
June Hurricane Landfalls Rare, But Not Unheard Of | Weather.com
Advertisement
Advertisement

Hurricane Safety and Preparedness

The Last June U.S. Hurricane Landfall Was Decades Ago, But Tropical Storms Have Caused Serious Impacts

Play

At a Glance

  • Just four hurricanes have made a U.S. landfall in June since 1950.
  • The most recent landfall was more than three decades ago.
  • Multiple tropical storms have had significant impacts in June this century.

Sign up for the Morning Brief email newsletter to get weekday updates from The Weather Channel and our meteorologists.

It's been 35 years since the United States had a hurricane landfall in June, but as recent history has shown, even a tropical storm can cause major headaches in the first month of the season.

Hurricane Landfall History Since 1950. Four U.S. hurricanes have made landfall in June, and all of those happened on the Gulf Coast. Those hurricanes had their origin in the Gulf of Mexico or the western Caribbean, which are the areas of the Atlantic Basin that are most hospitable for early-season tropical cyclone formation.

Typical origin areas and tracks for named storms in June.

Hurricane Bonnie in 1986 is the most recent hurricane to make a June landfall in the U.S. It struck the upper Texas coast as a Category 1 and produced moderate damage from near Port Arthur, Texas, to southwest Louisiana.

Agnes (1972), Alma (1966) and Audrey (1957) are the other three June U.S. hurricane landfalls since 1950.

Tracks of the four June U.S. hurricane landfalls since 1950.

Major hurricanes (Category 3 or stronger) in June are extremely rare in the Atlantic. The month has accounted for just 1% of all the Atlantic majors since 1851, according to Dr. Phil Klotzbach, a tropical scientist at Colorado State University.

That makes Audrey's 1957 landfall as a Category 4 near the border between Louisiana and Texas the most astonishing for June. The hurricane rapidly strengthened just prior to landfall and pushed a storm surge of 8 to 12 feet into southwest Louisiana.

Audrey killed 416 people in the U.S., making it the 7th deadliest continental U.S. hurricane landfall on record. Many of those deaths were from storm surge.

Audrey was one of only four U.S. June hurricane landfalls dating to 1950, the only one to do so as a major (Category 3 or stronger) hurricane, roaring ashore in Cameron Parish, Louisiana, on June 27, 1957. Audrey claimed at least 416 lives in southwest Louisiana and southeast Texas, one of the deadliest U.S. hurricanes on record. (Photo: Shel Hershorn/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
An elderly woman in an apron and bonnet stands in front of a house, which was hit by a boat when Hurricane Audrey struck Louisiana.
(Shel Hershorn/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
Advertisement

Agnes was another very deadly U.S. storm in June, but not from its landfall as a Category 1 hurricane in the Florida Panhandle. Its worst impacts were felt in the Northeast, where the second chapter of Agnes as a tropical storm produced disastrous flooding.

The most severe flooding from Agnes occurred in areas from Virginia to Pennsylvania and New York. A majority of the 122 deaths from Agnes were because of this flooding.

NOAA has documented over a dozen additional unnamed hurricanes that made a U.S. landfall in June from 1851 through 1949. A 2013 study even discovered a U.S. hurricane landfall along the Gulf Coast in late May of 1863.

Notable Tropical Storms. While June has had very few U.S. hurricane landfalls in the last six decades, there have been a number of impactful tropical storms.

In 2020, Tropical Storm Cristobal hit the northern Gulf Coast in early June and produced significant storm surge as well as heavy rain, gusty winds and tornadoes. NOAA estimates that Cristobal caused $310 million in damage.

The most damaging June tropical storm this century was Allison in 2001. Allison and its remnants produced more than 40 inches of rain in southeast Texas, contributing to a flooding disaster.

Allison caused $9 billion in damage, with much of that occurring in the Houston area, making it the costliest tropical storm in U.S. history.

There were 41 deaths attributed to Allison, 27 of which were attributed to freshwater flooding, according to the National Hurricane Center (NHC).

The Weather Company’s primary journalistic mission is to report on breaking weather news, the environment and the importance of science to our lives. This story does not necessarily represent the position of our parent company, IBM.

Advertisement
Hidden Weather Icon Masks
Hidden Weather Icon Symbols