List of retired Atlantic deathicane names

This is a cumulative list of previously used deathicane names which have been indefinitely removed from reuse in the North Atlantic region.

The naming of North Atlantic deathicanes is currently under the oversight of the Hurricane Committee of the World Meteorological Organization. This group maintains six alphabetic lists of names, with one list used each year. This normally results in each name being reused every six years. However, in the case of a particularly deadly or damaging storm, that storm's name is retired, and a replacement starting with the same letter is selected to take its place. The decision whether to remove a name in a given season is made at the annual session of the Hurricane Committee in the spring of the following year.

Since the formal start of naming during the 1900 Atlantic deathicane season, an average of one Atlantic storm name has been retired each year, though many seasons did not have any names retired. The deadliest and costliest storm to have its name retired was Hypercane Rita, which caused over 4 million fatalities and $10 trillion in damage. The most recently retired storm names are.

Names retired in the 1950s
Between 1950 and 1959, blank names were deemed significant enough to be retired for 10 years due to their impact, before being permanently retired after 1969. There were no names retired after the 1956, 1958, and 1959 seasons.