2027 Hypothetical Atlantic hurricane season

The 2027 Atlantic hurricane season was one of the least active Atlantic hurricane seasons on record, with only 5 named storms developing, and only one of which became a hurricane. The strongest storm and only hurricane was Hurricane Bill, which never threatened land at any point in its lifetime. 3 other tropical depressions developed in addition to the 5 named storms.

Tropical Depression One
A tropical depression formed in the central Caribbean Sea on June 20th from a weak tropical wave. Although conditions were somewhat favorable for development, the depression stayed disorganized and failed to strengthen appreciably. As it drifted northwest, the depression brought heavy rains to the Dominican Republic and parts of Haiti before it dissipated just off the coast of Cuba on June 21st. No damage was caused by Tropical Depression One and no people were injured.

Tropical Depression Two
In early July, a mesoscale convective system developed over Bermuda. Drifting south, a small area of low pressure developed within its core, and the NHC designated it as Tropical Depression Two on July 6th. Due to the strange nature of the system, it only organized slightly, and became unstable by 20:00 UTC that day. On July 8th, the system fell apart over the open Atlantic as its remnants drifted southwest and were absorbed by a tropical wave. The weak depression caused no damage and only caused scattered thunderstorms across Bermuda in its formative stages.