Tropical Storm Imelda is forecast to strengthen into a hurricane on Tuesday, but maps show it moving away from the southeastern U.S., according to the Miami-based National Hurricane Center.
Imelda is the ninth named storm of the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season. It formed on Sunday in the western Atlantic.
Tropical Storm Imelda forecast maps
As of 5 p.m. ET Monday, Imelda continued to bring tropical storm conditions and heavy rain to the northwestern Bahamas, according to the hurricane center’s latest advisory. The storm’s center was about 90 miles north of Great Abaco Island in the Bahamas and 205 miles east-southeast of Cape Canaveral, Florida, with maximum sustained winds of 65 mph.
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“On Tuesday, Imelda is expected to turn sharply to the east-northeast and accelerate,” the NHC said in its latest update, adding that the center of the system is “expected to start moving away from the northwestern Bahamas this afternoon and then turn east-northeastward, moving away from the southeastern U.S. but approaching the island of Bermuda on Wednesday.”
Rainfall amounts of 1 to 2 inches with up to 4 inches are expected through Tuesday across northeast Florida, coastal South Carolina and coastal sections of southeast North Carolina.
Swells generated by Tropical Storm Imelda and Hurricane Humberto are affecting the Bahamas and will spread to much of the U.S. East Coast early this week, the center added, warning that they’re “likely to cause life-threatening surf and rip current conditions.”
NOAA / National Hurricane Center
Tropical storm warnings and watches for Imelda
As of Monday at 5 p.m., a hurricane watch was issued for Bermuda, the hurricane center said. A tropical storm warning is in effect for parts of the extreme northwestern Bahamas, including Great Abaco, Grand Bahama Island and the surrounding keys.
A tropical storm watch that had been issued for part of Florida’s east coast, from the Palm Beach-Martin County line to the Flagler-Volusia County line, was canceled Sunday afternoon.
Imelda was expected to drop between 4 and 8 inches of rain across the northwest Bahamas through Tuesday, and 2 to 4 inches across eastern Cuba. State media in Cuba reported that a 60-year-old man died in Santiago de Cuba following landslides there.
Imelda follows Hurricane Humberto
Imelda came on the heels of Hurricane Humberto, which rapidly intensified to a major hurricane over the Atlantic on Saturday but is not expected to reach land. Humberto reached as high as a Category 5 on Saturday before fluctuating back down to Category 4.
NOAA / National Hurricane Center
Forecasters said last week there was a small possibility the two systems could interact, creating what is known as a Fujiwhara effect, a rare phenomenon in which two different storms merge and become entangled around a newly formed, common center. However, they said it wasn’t considered a likely outcome in this case.
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