where is hurricane gabrielle going to hit
Hurricane Gabrielle, which formed in September 2025, did not hit the United States or any major landmasses near the U.S. —its path stayed over the open Atlantic.
Storm's Actual Path
Gabrielle started as a tropical storm on September 17, roughly 1,000 miles east of the Leeward Islands, tracking northwest initially. It strengthened into a Category 1 hurricane by September 21, peaked as a rare Category 4 with 140 mph winds east of Bermuda on September 23, then weakened while curving northeast. By late September 25, it lost tropical traits southwest of the Azores, becoming post-tropical before brushing those islands on September 26 with gusty winds, heavy rain (up to 60.9 mm on Graciosa), high waves (10-18 meters), and minor damage like fallen trees and displaced residents. No U.S. landfall occurred—forecasters early on predicted it would veer away from the Caribbean and mainland, possibly nearing Bermuda but ultimately passing east.
Why No U.S. Impact?
- Steering currents pushed it northward then northeast, sparing the East Coast despite some swells reaching from North Carolina to Canada.
- Early models showed "highly uncertain" tracks over open water, avoiding land hazards.
- Peak intensity hit far offshore (180 miles east of Bermuda), with no coastal warnings issued for the Americas.
No active threat exists today (January 26, 2026)—Gabrielle dissipated months ago after the Azores glancing blow. Current Atlantic hurricane season updates show no successor storms named Gabrielle.
Historical Note : Gabrielle was the 7th named storm of 2025's active season, forming post-peak (around Sept. 10) but fizzling without U.S. drama, unlike more disruptive systems.
TL;DR : Gabrielle peaked far out in the Atlantic and only lightly clipped the Azores—no U.S. hit, all clear since September 2025.
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.