Subtropical Storm Arthur (2026)

Arthur formed in the month of April, becoming one of the rare few to do so. It only caused minimal damages in Newfoundland as an extratropical cyclone due to the gusty winds and moderate to heavy rainfall in the area.

Meteorological History
The precursor extratropical low that formed Arthur caused light rains in the New England area. It stayed just offshore slowly intensifying. The NHC started to monitor the system for possible development and on April 30 at 6:00 UTC it turned subtropical and was named Arthur. The next day, it performed an anticyclonic loop due to interaction with another low-pressure system. Shortly after, it started gaining speed and went under extratropical transition early on May 1. Arthur's extratropical remnants caused moderate to heavy rainfall on Newfoundland while remaining just offshore. It dissipated late on May 2 due to being absorbed by a much larger extratropical cyclone.