Do you like to study the history of hurricanes? Maybe compare the different levels of impact of hurricanes with the same name?
Just how do those storms get named anyway?
The hurricanes and tropical storms you hear about each Atlantic hurricane season get their names from six lists originated and recycled every six years by the World Meteorological Organization.
A name is retired and replaced when a storm with that name causes extreme property damage and loss of life. Lorenzo is the 12th name on the list for 2025.

Lorenzo is a relatively new addition to the list. It replaced Luis in 1995 after Category 4 Hurricane Luis killed 18 people across the Caribbean and one person in the United States that year while causing more than $3 billion in damage.
Lorenzo has reached tropical storm strength twice and hurricane status twice in the years it has appeared. Lorenzo’s potential formation in 2025 as a tropical storm or hurricane connects directly to its wind speed.
Phases of Tropical Cyclones
All named storms are a form of tropical cyclone — a rotating, organized system of clouds and thunderstorms that originates over tropical or subtropical waters and has a closed low-level circulation.
Phase 1: Tropical Depression
Early in a cyclone’s development, as a tropical depression, wind speeds are less than 39 mph.
Tropical depressions are not given names but are numbered and tracked in case they grow into tropical storms or hurricanes.
Phase 2: Tropical Storm
Should a sufficiently powerful weather system develop late in the season with a sustained wind speed of 39 mph, Tropical Storm Lorenzo will make its debut.
Phase 3: Hurricane
If that speed reaches 74 mph, Hurricane Lorenzo will enter the record books.
If you live in an area where such a storm system is expected, take all necessary precautions, keep up to date on reports of the storm’s path, and don’t underestimate the potential impact to your community.
When Was Hurricane Lorenzo?
Lorenzo grew to hurricane force in 2007 and 2019.
In 2001 and 2013, Lorenzo was named as a tropical storm but did not develop further.
Where Did Hurricane Lorenzo Hit?
In 2007, Hurricane Lorenzo made landfall at Veracruz, Mexico, a coastal city open to the Gulf of Mexico where Lorenzo had formed to the east.
In 2019, Lorenzo remained at sea until near the end of its cycle, making landfall in Ireland and the United Kingdom.

What Category Was Hurricane Lorenzo?
When you hear reports of a hurricane’s category, you are hearing a description of wind speed on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale.
In 2007, Hurricane Lorenzo remained at a Category 1 level. Hurricane Lorenzo grew to a massive Category 5 storm in 2019.

What Time Will Hurricane Lorenzo Make Landfall?
There is no correlation between similarly named hurricanes in history, as the records of the three hurricanes named Lorenzo show.
Researching, “What time did Hurricane Lorenzo make landfall?” will not help you prepare for a potential Hurricane Lorenzo in 2025.
With any current storm predicted to reach your region, stay up to date on weather forecasts and be aware of that specific storm’s estimated landfall.
With any severe storm, don’t make the mistake of waiting until the last minute to reach a safe area.
This article will be updated should more details about Lorenzo become available in 2025.

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How Many People Died in Hurricane Lorenzo?
Category 5 Lorenzo cost 20 lives in 2019 despite its long journey at sea. Eleven deaths were crew members from the Bourbon Rhode tugboat in the Atlantic. The U.S. East Coast was 2,000 miles from the storm, but four people drowned in North Carolina in rip tides caused by Lorenzo.
Two drowned when swept away near New York City. Two more drownings occurred in Rhode Island and Florida. Even though it never grew beyond a Category 1 storm, Lorenzo killed six people in Mexico in 2007.
What Was the Path of Hurricane Lorenzo?
In 2007, Lorenzo formed in the Gulf of Mexico and moved directly west into the coast of Mexico at Veracruz.
In 2019, Lorenzo developed off the coast of West Africa and moved west and then north in the Atlantic until making landfall in Ireland and the United Kingdom.
Convoy of Hope & Hurricanes
Convoy of Hope, a faith-based nonprofit serving the poor in dozens of program countries around the world, responded to its first disaster in 1998 when flooding in Del Rio, Texas, followed that year’s Tropical Storm Charley.
Hurricane response continues to be an annual priority for Convoy.
Convoy’s 2024 response to Hurricane Helene.
Convoy’s 2024 Major Responses
In the 2024 Atlantic hurricane season, Hurricane Beryl broke two records — becoming the earliest Category 4 storm on June 30 and the earliest Category 5 on July 1.
Convoy quickly began meeting the needs of communities in Beryl’s path. Beryl’s first effects were felt in the Caribbean, where Convoy served more than 43,000 meals and distributed family food kits, hygiene kits, water filters, solar lamps, and generators.
To view Convoy’s response to Hurricane Ian, watch the video above.
On September 26, Category 4 Hurricane Helene became the strongest recorded hurricane to strike Florida’s Big Bend region.
It was the deadliest hurricane since 2005’s Katrina, with more than 230 fatalities.
By November, Convoy had distributed more than 4 million pounds of resources in 85 communities across Florida and five other impacted states.
Hurricane Milton was the final major storm of the 2024 season and hit Florida with heavy rain and flooding even as the state continued to recover from Helene.
Convoy continued its regional response to include 27 communities recovering from Milton. Nearly 1 million pounds of resources were distributed.
Convoy of Hope Disaster Services responds to natural disasters around the world, offering help and hope to people facing some of the most challenging circumstances in their lives.
Convoy of Hope is a nonprofit, faith-based organization with a driving passion to feed the world through children’s feeding initiatives, community outreach, and disaster response.