2021 Atlantic Hurricane Season (zal0phus)

The 2021 Atlantic Hurricane Season was the first in a series of four consecutive hyperactive and extremely destructive Atlantic hurricane seasons. Producing 19 cyclones, 13 hurricanes, and a then-record-tying 7 major hurricanes, the season was the most active since 2017, signifying an abrupt end to the brief inactive phase that had begun in 2019. The deadliest season since 1998, the 2021 hurricane season's impact was widespread and severe, inflicting some $152 billion USD in damages across the Atlantic basin, chiefly due to five of the season's seven major hurricanes- Claudette, Ida, Kate, Larry, and Rose.

Hurricane Bill claimed the most in human lives, killing around 4,300 people as a result of torrential flooding it instigated while stalling over Tabasco, Veracruz, and Tamaulipas. Claudette, a devastating Category 5 annular hurricane, inflicted catastrophic damage in the Florida Keys; Ida inflicted Category 4 damage in Nicaragua and slammed into Southwest Florida as a large Category 3; Kate, the largest Atlantic hurricane on record, made landfall north of Galveston, Texas as a very large Category 3, inflicting extreme damage; Larry crossed over Costa Rica into the Pacific and made an unprecedented landfall on Southern California as a Category 2; and Rose first crossed south Florida before making the strongest recorded Canadian landfall.