List of Pacific hurricane records


This is a list of notable Pacific hurricanes, subdivided by reason for notability. Notability means that it has met some criterion or achieved some statistic, or is part of a top ten for some superlative. It includes lists and rankings of Pacific hurricanes by different characteristics and impacts.
Characteristics include extremes of location, such as the northernmost or most equator-ward formation or position of a tropical cyclone. Other characteristics include its central pressure, windspeed, category on the Saffir–Simpson scale, cyclogenesis outside of a normal hurricane season's timeframe, or storms that remain unnamed despite forming after tropical cyclone naming began in 1960. Another characteristic is how long a system lasted from formation to dissipation. These include the cost of damage, the number of casualties, as well as meteorological statistics such as rainfall point maximum, wind speed, and minimum pressure.

Impact

Retired names

The following names have been retired in the East Pacific : [Tropical Storm Tropical Storm Hazel (1965)|Hazel (1965)|Hazel], [Hurricane Hurricane Adele (1970)|Adele (1970)|Adele], Fico, Knut, Iva, Fefa, Ismael, Pauline, [Hurricane Hurricane Adolph (2001)|Adolph (2001)|Adolph], Israel, Kenna, Alma, Manuel, Odile, Isis, Patricia, [Hurricane Hurricane Dora (1999)|Dora (2023)|Dora], Otis, and John.
In addition, the following names have been retired in the Central Pacific : Iwa, Iniki, Paka, and Ioke.
From the lists above, the names Hazel and Adele were retired for unclear reasons. Also, the names Adolph, Israel, and Isis were retired because of political considerations. In particular, the name Isis was pre-emptively removed in 2015 from the list of names for 2016 after being deemed inappropriate because of the eponymous militant group.

Costliest tropical cyclones

Tropical cyclones listed here are listed with the value from the source providing the highest value. Due to source variation and inconsistency, some sources may state damage totals lower than what is listed.

Seasonal activity and records

In the Central Pacific Hurricane Center's area of responsibility, the season with the most tropical cyclones is the 2015 season with 16 cyclones forming in or entering the region. A season without cyclones has happened a few times since 1966, most recently in [1979 Pacific 1858 San Diego hurricane|hurricane season|1979].

Lowest

Before 1971 and especially 1966, data in this basin is extremely unreliable. The geostationary satellite era began in 1966, and that year is often considered the first year of reliable tropical records. Intensity estimates are most reliable starting in the 1971 season. A few years later, the Dvorak technique came into use. Those two factors make intensity estimates more reliable starting in that year. For these reasons, seasons prior to 1971 are not included.

Naming history

Naming of tropical cyclones in the eastern north Pacific began in the 1960 season. That year, four lists of names were created. The plan was to proceed in a manner similar to that of the western Pacific; that is, the name of the first storm in one season would be the next unused one from the same list, and when the bottom of one list was reached the next list was started. This scheme was abandoned in 1965 and next year, the lists started being recycled on a four-year rotation, starting with the A name each year. That same general scheme remains in use today, although the names and lists are different. On average, the eastern north Pacific sees about sixteen named storms per year.

Named storms per month

Specific seasonal data in the Eastern Pacific basin was first compiled in 1949. Therefore, seasons before 1949 are excluded from the "Most named" column.
Also, before 1971 and especially 1966, data in this basin is extremely unreliable. The geostationary satellite era began in 1966, and that year is often considered the first year of reliable tropical records. Intensity estimates are more reliable starting in the 1971 season. A few years later, the Dvorak technique came into use. Those two make intensity estimates more reliable starting in that year. For these reasons, seasons before 1971 are not included in the "Fewest named" column.

Off-season storms

The Pacific hurricane season runs from May 15 to November 30. Only systems that develop or enter during the off-season are included. The earliest off-season storm is Pali in 2016 whilst the latest off-season storm was Nine-C during 2015.
NameFormation date
UnnamedDecember 1832
"Froc Cyclone"December 23, 1902
"Hurd Cyclone"December 23, 1904
UnnamedMay 3, 1906
UnnamedFebruary 6, 1922
NineDecember 22, 1925
EightDecember 4, 1936
CarmenApril 4, 1980†
WinnieDecember 4, 1983
WinonaJanuary 9, 1989
AlmaMay 12, 1990
EkekaJanuary 26, 1992
HaliMarch 28, 1992
One-EMay 13, 1996
OmekaDecember 20, 2010
AlettaMay 14, 2012
Nine-CDecember 31, 2015
PaliJanuary 7, 2016
AdrianMay 9, 2017
One-EMay 10, 2018
One-EApril 25, 2020
AndresMay 9, 2021

†Entered the basin on this date

Unnamed storms

Tropical cyclones have received official names in the Eastern and Central Pacific beginning in 1960. Since then, 6 tropical storms or hurricanes have formed that did not receive a storm name.

Strength

Category 5

Since 1959, 20 Pacific hurricanes have attained Category 5 intensity. The only one to make landfall while at this intensity was Otis in 2023.

Category 4

Since 1900, 141 Pacific hurricanes have attained Category 4 intensity, of which five made landfall at that strength.

Category 3

Since 1970, 86 Pacific hurricanes have attained Category 3 intensity, of which three made landfall at that strength.

Duration records

This lists all Pacific hurricanes that existed as tropical cyclones while in the Pacific Ocean east of the dateline for more than two weeks continuously. Hurricanes John and Dora spent some time in the west Pacific before dissipating. John spent eleven days west of the dateline; if that time was included John would have existed for a total of 30 days and 18 hours, while including Dora's time in the west Pacific would mean that it existed for 18 days. One Atlantic hurricane, Hurricane Joan, crossed into this basin and was renamed Miriam, giving it a total lifespan of 22 days, but not all of that was in the Pacific. 1993's Greg formed from the remnants of Tropical Storm Bret (1993). Its time as an Atlantic system is excluded.
All of these systems except Trudy, Olaf, and Connie existed in both the east and central Pacific, and all except Olaf were hurricanes. Hurricane Trudy of 1990 is thus the longest lived eastern Pacific hurricane to stay in the eastern Pacific. Tropical Storm Olaf of 1997 is hence the longest-lived eastern Pacific tropical cyclone not to reach hurricane intensity.
No known tropical cyclone forming in the central north Pacific lasted for longer than 14 days without crossing into another basin. The tropical cyclone forming in the central Pacific that spent the most time there was Hurricane Ana (2014) at 12.75 days from formation to extratropical transition.
RankDuration NameSeason
124.50Tina1992
220.00Fico1978
319.00John1994
417.50Kevin1991
516.75Trudy1990
616.50Guillermo1997
616.50Olaf1997
816.25Celeste1972
816.25Doreen1973
816.25Kenneth2005
1116.00Daniel1982
1215.25Connie1974
1314.50Jimena2015
1314.50Darby2016
1514.00Marie1990
1514.00Greg1993
1514.00Dora1999
1514.00Lane2018
1514.00Olivia2018

Before the weather satellite era began, the lifespans of many Pacific hurricanes may be underestimated.

Crossover storms

From Atlantic to Eastern Pacific

This includes only systems which stayed a tropical cyclone during the passage or that maintained a circulation during the crossover.
It used to be that when a Pacific named storm crossed North America and made it to the Atlantic, it would receive the next name on the respective basin's list. However, in 2000 this policy was changed so that a tropical cyclone will keep its name if it remains a tropical cyclone during the entire passage. Only if it dissipates and then re-forms does it get renamed.

From Eastern Pacific to Atlantic

This includes only systems which stayed a tropical cyclone during the passage or that maintained a circulation during the crossover.
SeasonStorm Storm
1842UnnamedUnnamed
1902Unnumbered tropical depressionFour
1923UnnamedSix
1949Unnumbered tropical depressionEleven
2010Eleven-EHermine

From Eastern Pacific to Western Pacific

Neither eastern Pacific tropical cyclones passing 140°W, nor central Pacific tropical cyclones crossing the dateline, are notable events. However, very few eastern Pacific proper cyclones that enter the central Pacific make it to the dateline.
SeasonName
1986Georgette
1991Enrique
1994Li
1994John
1999Dora
2014Genevieve
2018Hector
2023Dora

System ceased to be a tropical cyclone and regenerated at least once during its life span.
‡ System formed in the eastern Pacific, but was not named until it crossed into the central Pacific.
In addition, Hurricane Jimena of 2003 is recognized per NHC, CPHC and JTWC as a storm that existed in all three areas of responsibility, but isn't recognized by the JMA as an official western Pacific tropical cyclone.

From Western Pacific to Central Pacific

Tropical cyclones crossing from the western Pacific to the central Pacific are fairly rare, and this has happened only ten times. Of those ten times, six of them were storms which crossed the dateline twice; from the western to the central pacific and back. No tropical cyclone from the western Pacific has ever traveled east of 140°W.
SeasonName
1958[Hurricane Hurricane June (1958)|June (1958)|June]
1959Patsy
1968Virginia
1980Carmen
1984Moke
1985Skip
1994John*
1996Seventeen-W
2000Wene
2010Omeka

System crossed the dateline twice.
* Hurricane/Typhoon John formed in the eastern Pacific.

From Central Pacific to Eastern Pacific

Tropical cyclones crossing from the eastern Pacific to the central Pacific are routine; ones going the other way are not. That event has happened four times.
SeasonName
1975Unnamed
1982Ema
2015Olaf
2016Ulika

System crossed 140°W more than once.
In addition to these, an unofficial cyclone formed on October 30, 2006 in the central Pacific subtropics. It eventually developed an eye-like structure. Its track data indicates that it crossed from the central to the east Pacific because it formed at longitude 149°W and dissipated at 135°W. NASA, which is not a meteorological organization, called this system a subtropical cyclone, and the Naval Research Laboratory Monterey had enough interest in it to call it 91C. The system has also been called extratropical. This cyclone is unofficial because it is not included in the seasonal reports of either Regional Specialized Meteorological Center.

Intensity records

Ten most intense

Per lowest central pressure

The apparent increase in recent seasons is spurious; it is due to better estimation and measurement, not an increase in intense storms. That is, until 1988, Pacific hurricanes generally did not have their central pressures measured or estimated from satellite imagery.
RankHurricaneYearPressure
1Patricia2015872 mbar
2Linda1997902 mbar*
3Rick2009906 mbar*
4Kenna2002913 mbar
5Ava1973915 mbar
5Ioke2006915 mbar*
7Marie2014918 mbar*
7Odile2014918 mbar
9Guillermo1997919 mbar*
10[Hurricane Hurricane Gilma (1994)|Gilma (1994)|Gilma]1994920 mbar*

* Estimated from satellite imagery
Measured and adjusted
Measured
~ Pressure while East of the International Date Line

Per highest sustained winds

RankHurricaneYearWinds
1Patricia2015215 mph; 345 km/h
2Linda1997185 mph; 295 km/h
3Rick2009180 mph; 285 km/h
4Patsy1959175 mph; 280 km/h
4John1994175 mph; 280 km/h
6Kenna2002165 mph; 270 km/h
6Otis2023165 mph; 270 km/h

Strongest storm in each month

Intensity is measured solely by central pressure unless the pressure is not known, in which case intensity is measured by maximum sustained winds.
MonthNameYearMinimum pressureMaximum windsClassification
Pali2016977 mb
Ekeka1992≤ 985 mb
Hali19921005 mb
Carmen1980unknown mb
Amanda2014932 mb
Ava1973915 mb
Gilma1994920 mb
Ioke2006915 mb
Linda1997902 mb
Patricia2015872 mb
Sandra2015934 mb
Omeka2010997 mb

This tropical cyclone is the strongest to form in its month by virtue of its being the only known system.

Unusual landfall locations

California

After October or before June, 1854 – A system considered a tropical cyclone makes landfall just north of the Golden Gate.October 2, 1858 – A hurricane makes a direct hit on Southern California before dissipating. The hurricane may or may not have made landfall in San Diego County, due to uncertainty in the track reconstruction. San Diego experienced hurricane-force winds, with torrential rainfall recorded all across Southern California. After October or before June, 1859 – A system considered a tropical cyclone makes landfall between Cape Mendocino and San Francisco Bay.September 25, 1939 – The 1939 California tropical storm makes landfall in San Pedro, California, killing 45 to 93 people.September 6, 1972Tropical Depression Hyacinth makes landfall.September 6, 1978Tropical Depression Norman makes landfall.

Hawaii

August 9, 1871 - Indigenous sources suggest that a Category 3 hurricane struck the Big Island and Maui.August 7, 1958 – A tropical storm makes landfall on the Big Island of Hawaii.August 7, 1959Hurricane Dot makes landfall on Kauai.October 20, 1983Tropical Depression Raymond makes landfall on Molokai, Oahu, and Kauai.August 3, 1988Tropical Depression Gilma makes landfall on Maui and Molokai.September 11, 1992Hurricane Iniki makes landfall on Kauai, killing six throughout the islands.September 14, 1992Tropical Depression Orlene makes landfall on the Big Island.July 24, 1993Tropical Depression Eugene makes landfall on the Big Island of Hawaii.August 8, 2014Tropical Storm Iselle makes landfall on the Big Island of Hawaii, killing one on Kauai.July 24, 2016Tropical Storm Darby makes landfall on the Big Island of Hawaii.September 12, 2018Tropical Storm Olivia makes landfall on Maui and Lanai.

Wettest tropical cyclones

All of these values are point maxima.

Mexico

1144256.8John 2024Guerrero
2101139.80Juliette 2001Cuadano/Santiago
3686.027.01Pauline 1997San Luis Acatlan
4628.124.73Odile 1984Costa Azul/Acapulco
5610.124.02Isis 1998Caduano/Santiago
6570.022.44Flossie 2001Suchixtlahuaca
7566.922.32Greg 1999Tecoman
8531.920.94Nora 1997La Cruz/Elota
9525.320.68Eugene 1987Aquila
10523.020.59Lidia 1981El Varonjal/Badiraguato

Continental United States

1Norma 1981Breckenridge, Texas
2Tico 1983Chickasha, Oklahoma
3Odile 2014Gail, Texas
4Kathleen 1976Mount San Gorgonio, California
5Roslyn 1986Matagorda Texas #2
6Hilary 2023Upper Mission Creek, California
7Nora 1997Harquahala Mountains, Arizona
8Octave 1983Mount Graham, Arizona
9Norma 1970Workman Creek, Arizona
10Unnamed 1939Mount Wilson (California)

Overall

1144256.8John 2024Guerrero
2132152.02Lane 2018Mountainview, Hawaii
3132152.00Hiki 1950Kanalohuluhulu Ranger Station, Hawaii
4101139.80Juliette 2001Cuadano/Santiago, Mexico
5984.538.76Paul 2000Kapapala Ranch, Hawaii
6732.028.82Hone 2024Hakalau, Hawaii
7686.027.01Pauline 1997San Luis Acatlan, Mexico
8635.025.00Maggie 1970Hawaii
9628.124.73Odile 1984Costa Azul/Acapulco, Mexico
10610.124.02Isis 1998Caduano/Santiago, Mexico

Worldwide cyclone records set by Pacific storms

Highest official wind speed ever recorded in a tropical cyclone: Hurricane Patricia with maximum sustained winds of.Fastest intensification : Hurricane Patricia 55 m/s, from 40 m/s to 95 m/s in under 24 hFarthest-travelling tropical cyclone: Hurricane John travelled for 13,180 km.Tropical cyclone at Category 4 or 5 intensity on the Saffir–Simpson scale for the longest: Hurricane Ioke was at that intensity for 198 consecutive hours.