Atlantic Hurricane Outlook – July 30, 2025: Development Chances Remain Low

As July ends, the Atlantic Basin sees active tropical waves, but development chances remain low for the next 7 days. Discover the latest on sea surface temperatures, wind shear, Saharan Air Layer, and the outlook from CAT5Prep.com.

*Those who like data, continue reading. Those it prefer the quick version, jump to the TL;DR here.
** Due to technical issues on the GOES satellite imagery provider's end, we are currently unable to display real-time satellite imagery.

The Atlantic Basin remains active with multiple tropical waves stretching from the African coast to the Caribbean, yet no organized development is expected in the near term. Wind shear and Saharan dust continue to suppress cyclone formation despite warm ocean temperatures and a moistening atmosphere in the western basin.

As we close out July, conditions are slowly trending toward a more favorable setup for storm development heading into August.

Atlantic Basin Overview

As of the 8:00 AM EDT NHC Tropical Weather Outlook:

  • No active tropical cyclones.

  • Three tropical waves span the Atlantic:

    • Wave near 35°W (eastern Atlantic): Disorganized, little convection.

    • Wave near 50°W (central Atlantic): Producing scattered thunderstorms, no surface low.

    • Wave in the eastern Caribbean: Weak and encountering dry air and shear.

NHC Development Odds:

  • Next 48 hours: 0%

  • Next 7 days: 0%

Key Environmental Factors

SST data courtesy of Windy.com

Wind data at 850hPa from Windy.com

Sea Surface Temperatures (SSTs):

  • 29–31°C (84–88°F) in the Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean.

  • MDR remains slightly warmer than normal.

Wind Shear:

  • Moderate across the central Atlantic and Caribbean.

  • Suppressing vertical development for now.

Saharan Air Layer (SAL):

  • Strong dry air across much of the basin.

  • Limiting convection and keeping tropical waves disorganized.

Moisture:

  • Gradually increasing in the western Atlantic and Caribbean.

  • A factor to monitor as wind shear begins to ease.

Dust & SAL data from Windy.com

Relative Humidity (700 hPa) data courtesy of Windy.com

Gulf of Mexico (Gulf of America)

  • A weak surface trough in the central Gulf is producing scattered showers and isolated thunderstorms.

  • No signs of organization, and the NHC does not expect development at this time.

  • High pressure remains dominant elsewhere, with calm conditions expected through midweek.

Florida Weather

  • Highs in the upper 80s to low 90s with high humidity.

  • Scattered thunderstorms possible in the afternoon and evening from sea breeze interactions.

  • No tropical threats to Florida at this time.

Radar imagery courtesy of Windy.com

Outlook & Preparedness

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The Atlantic remains broadly quiet for now, but the environment is slowly shifting. A steady wave train emerging off Africa and increasingly favorable SSTs point to a more active window in early to mid-August.

Now is the time to double-check hurricane kits, review evacuation zones, and prepare while the weather allows.

TL;DR – July 30 Snapshot

  • No tropical development expected this week.

  • Three tropical waves are present but remain weak and disorganized.

  • SAL and shear are limiting development.

  • Conditions should become more favorable by early August.

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