Daily NOAA Atlantic Tropical Weather Outlook For Florida: July 16, 2026

NOAA National Hurricane Center 7-day Atlantic tropical weather outlook graphic for July 16, 2026

Daily Florida hurricane-season check for July 16, 2026: NOAA/NHC highlighted: Eastern Tropical Atlantic, Northeastern Gulf of America and Offshore of the Southeastern U.S. This post preserves the current NOAA/National Hurricane Center Atlantic Tropical Weather Outlook text and the NOAA 7-day Atlantic graphical outlook image so Florida customers have a quick place to check the day’s tropical-weather signal.

NOAA National Hurricane Center 7-day Atlantic tropical weather outlook graphic for July 16, 2026
NOAA/NHC 7-day Atlantic Tropical Weather Outlook graphic copied for the morning hurricane-season update on July 16, 2026.

Quick Read

  • NOAA/NHC issue time: 200 AM EDT Thu Jul 16 2026
  • Area covered: For the North Atlantic…Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of America:
  • Highlighted area: Eastern Tropical Atlantic, Northeastern Gulf of America and Offshore of the Southeastern U.S.
  • Formation chances: * Formation chance through 48 hours…low…10 percent. * Formation chance through 7 days…low…10 percent. * Formation chance through 48 hours…low…near 0 percent. * Formation chance through 7 days…low…20 percent.
  • Local takeaway: Florida residents and small businesses should keep an eye on the official NHC outlook, especially when a system is near the Gulf, Caribbean, Bahamas, or southeastern U.S. coast.

Copied NOAA/NHC Atlantic Tropical Weather Outlook

The text below is copied from NOAA/NHC’s Atlantic Tropical Weather Outlook product for this morning’s daily check. Always use NOAA/NHC and local emergency management sources for official decisions.

en Español

000
ABNT20 KNHC 160515
TWOAT 

Tropical Weather Outlook
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL
200 AM EDT Thu Jul 16 2026

For the North Atlantic...Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of America:

Eastern Tropical Atlantic:
Showers and thunderstorms associated with a tropical wave located 
southeast of the Cabo Verde Islands remain disorganized. Some slow 
development is possible during the next couple of days while the 
system moves generally west-northwestward at about 10 mph. By this 
weekend, the system is forecast to move into a less conducive 
environment, and further development is not expected.
* Formation chance through 48 hours...low...10 percent.
* Formation chance through 7 days...low...10 percent.

Northeastern Gulf of America and Offshore of the Southeastern U.S.:
An area of low pressure is forecast to form this weekend over the 
northeastern Gulf of America. Some gradual development of this 
system is possible while it moves slowly northeastward over the 
northeastern Gulf and near the coast of the southeastern United 
States early next week.
* Formation chance through 48 hours...low...near 0 percent.
* Formation chance through 7 days...low...20 percent.

$$
Forecaster Gibbs

What This Means For Florida Customers

A low formation chance does not mean “ignore hurricane season.” It means there may not be a high-confidence tropical cyclone threat right now, but weather systems can change, and Florida businesses still need working communications, backups, power plans, and a way to keep customers and staff informed.

  • Home users: keep phones charged, know where your important documents are, and make sure family members can receive weather alerts.
  • Small businesses: check backups, payment systems, internet failover, cloud access, and how you would contact staff if power or internet goes down.
  • Remote workers: make sure MFA recovery options, laptop chargers, mobile hotspots, and VPN access are ready before a storm is close.
  • Anyone near the coast: follow official local evacuation and emergency-management guidance. Technology planning does not replace safety planning.

Daily Hurricane-Season Tech Checklist

  • Backups: confirm your most important files are backed up somewhere that is not only sitting in the same building.
  • Battery power: charge phones, laptops, power banks, UPS units, flashlights, and weather radios.
  • Internet fallback: know whether your phone hotspot, secondary ISP, or business failover connection actually works.
  • Account recovery: make sure you can access email, Microsoft 365, Google Workspace, Apple, banking, payroll, and domain accounts if your main device is unavailable.
  • Contacts: keep IT, ISP, insurance, landlord, staff, and vendor contact details available offline.
  • Equipment: move critical electronics off floors, label cables, and avoid leaving network gear where water intrusion is likely.

Published as a daily 7:00 AM Eastern hurricane-season check. NOAA/NHC products can update several times per day when conditions warrant, so check the official links above for the latest advisory before making weather or safety decisions.