Guides
Hurricane prep and reference guides.
Everything you need to understand what's happening in the Atlantic this season, what it means for you, and what to do about it — before, during, and after a storm.
Understand the threat
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SafetyWhat is storm surge — and why it kills more people than windStorm surge is the wall of ocean water pushed ashore by a hurricane's circulation. It's responsible for more deaths than any other storm hazard. Here's how it works, how to know your risk, and why category alone doesn't tell the story.
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ReferenceHurricane categories 1 through 5: what the Saffir-Simpson scale actually meansWind speed thresholds, typical damage, and what Category 1 through 5 means for a structure, a neighborhood, and a coastal community. Plus why category alone is an incomplete picture of storm danger.
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ReferenceHow to read the NHC cone of uncertaintyThe cone does not show where the storm will go — it shows where the center could go. Here's what it actually means, why the most dangerous conditions are often outside the cone, and how to use NHC graphics correctly.
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ReferenceAtlantic hurricane season: when it peaks and what history tells usSeason opens June 1. Peak runs August 20 through October 10. Climatological peak is September 10. Here's the full historical record of named storms, hurricanes, and major hurricanes by week — and what above-normal versus below-normal actually looks like.
Prepare your home
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PrepHurricane prep checklist: what to do by season statePre-season prep is different from active-storm prep. A timeline-based checklist organized by when you actually need to do each thing — shutters two weeks out, fuel three days out, kit one hour out.
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PrepGenerator buying guide for hurricane seasonPortable vs. standby, wattage math, transfer switch requirements, safe operation rules, and which models actually hold up in the Gulf Coast market. Order before the season peaks — supply collapses during storm watches.
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SafetyEvacuation planning: routes, timing, and what to bringHow to find your evacuation zone, when to leave relative to storm landfall, which routes stay passable longest, and what documents and supplies to have staged. The time to plan this is June, not when a watch is posted.
Insurance and finances
Historical context