Track active tropical cyclones including tropical depressions, tropical storms, hurricanes, and central Pacific cyclones using live NOAA data. Monitor storm movement, intensity, distance, advisory links, local hazard context, and cyclone activity in one clean dashboard.
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Coverage note: This page is using official NHC/CPHC data. Atlantic, East Pacific, and Central Pacific are supported here. West Pacific typhoons and Indian Ocean systems need a different source.
Active Alert Strip
No Immediate Threat
No active tropical cyclone threat detected near your selected location.
Storm Activity Summary
Active Systems
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Live count of active systems in the selected NOAA-supported basins.
Nearest System
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Closest active storm to your current or searched location.
Distance
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Approximate great-circle distance from your location to the nearest storm center.
Local Wind Context
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Local wind conditions from Open-Meteo to compare with tropical system proximity.
Active Systems
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Movement + Track
Selected Storm Movement
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Direction and forward speed from the official NOAA/NHC summary file.
Forecast / Advisory Link
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Open the latest official advisory and graphics page for the selected storm.
Intensity Panel
Classification
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Storm class from the NOAA summary feed.
Max Winds
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Maximum sustained winds reported in the current summary.
Pressure
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Latest minimum central pressure from the current summary.
Strength Trend
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Simple trend estimate from pressure and wind strength.
Storm Track Map
You
Storm
Warnings & Watches
Official watches, warnings, hazards, and next-advisory timing are contained in each storm’s latest Public Advisory. Use the advisory links above to open the official NOAA text directly.
Hazard Breakdown
Wind Risk
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Based on sustained winds, storm class, and distance.
Rainfall Risk
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Proxy estimate using storm proximity and local humidity / pressure context.
Surge Risk
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Proxy estimate based on storm intensity, pressure, and coastal proximity assumptions.
Sea State
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Local marine context from wind and nearby storm environment.
Advisory Timeline
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Forecast Confidence
Confidence increases near the storm center and decreases farther out in time. Use the official advisory and forecast graphics for the latest NOAA guidance.
Tropical Cyclones, Hurricanes, Tropical Storms, and Cyclone Tracking
This page tracks active tropical cyclones using live official NOAA/NHC data, including tropical depressions, tropical storms, hurricanes, and central Pacific cyclone systems. It is designed for users searching for hurricane tracker, tropical storm tracker, cyclone tracker, storm path forecast, live hurricane updates, and tropical cyclone movement.
How this page works
The storm cards on this page are driven by NOAA’s active storm summary feed. That feed contains storm name, classification, intensity, pressure, storm center latitude and longitude, movement direction, movement speed, and links to official products such as the Public Advisory and forecast graphics. The local location search and local environmental context are supplemented with Open-Meteo weather data.
What a tropical cyclone is
A tropical cyclone is a rotating low-pressure system that forms over warm tropical or subtropical waters. Depending on basin and intensity, these systems may be called tropical depressions, tropical storms, hurricanes, or cyclones. Stronger systems can produce destructive wind, heavy rainfall, dangerous surf, and storm surge.
What the different storm classes mean
Tropical depressions are the weaker organized systems. Tropical storms are stronger and receive official names. Hurricanes are stronger tropical cyclones in the Atlantic and East/Central Pacific basins. This page reports the classification directly from the official NOAA storm summary feed so users can quickly see the current class of each active system.
How to interpret movement, pressure, and wind
Movement direction and forward speed show where the storm center is heading. Pressure helps indicate how intense the storm is, while maximum sustained winds show the wind hazard level. Lower pressure and higher sustained winds usually indicate a stronger system. Distance from your selected location helps you judge how close the threat is.
Watches, warnings, and hazards
NOAA’s Public Advisory is the main product for general users because it contains the summary, watches and warnings, hazards, and next advisory timing. This page links directly to the latest advisory for each active storm so users can open the official text without delay.
Coverage note
This page is using live NOAA/NHC/CPHC storm data. It is ideal for Atlantic, Eastern Pacific, and Central Pacific systems. West Pacific typhoons and Indian Ocean systems would require an additional source from another tropical cyclone center.