1. Harvey and Maria (2017) – These two take the top spot in a joint position because of how catastrophic their impacts were. Both caused catastrophic and unprecedented effects to the respective areas (Texas and Puerto Rico). Seeing the flooding of Houston and the destruction in PR was heartbreaking to say the least. I mean just the damages between the two accounted for more then 60% of the total damage caused by the historic 2017 season. The deaths also were horrific and in the case of the latter was the deadliest since at least 2005 (partially caused by some ignorance but I won’t go into that).
2. Sandy (2012) – This one is definitely up here not just because of all it’s characteristics and impacts but also because it had a really bad impact where I live. Power was knocked out for a week and then was further hampered by the snowstorm that followed about a week later. Should I also add Sandy had SNOW? That never happens in a TC, but when you get one of the biggest anomalous weather patterns that involve a large as hell TC, omega block and a strong cold front that can happen. $75B is nothing to laugh at and it also killed quite a lot in the Caribbean.
3. Irma (2017) – Practically was Ivan’s older sister. One of the most devastating Cape Verde hurricanes I’ve ever tracked and the amount of destruction it caused through the islands surrounding and including Barbuda, as well as the Bahamas and Cuba, all at C5, as well as the destruction it caused in the US. Plus it sustained C5 intensity for a long period time which is normally not the case (usually they only are C5 for like 12h and weaken, but Irma sustained it for I think 3 days, the 5th through the 8th).
4. Dorian (2019) - Simply put, this storm was absolutely nothing short of a monster. From the very beginning it looked like it would just be another name waster or such and then the center relocation happened and changed everything. The sheer intensity alone which looks to be rivalling Allen in '80 was historic, a 177 kt dropsonde and several 165-170 kt SFMR was nothing to screw around with. Add on the fact that Dorian then made landfall in the Bahamas at this intensity and THEN PROCEEDED to sit on the islands for about a day and a half causing unprecedented damage to the islands of beauty. The pictures that came out of those areas literally broke my heart and I fear we might’ve had another Maria situation there as some outlets reported that as many as 3,000 might be dead, hopefully not the case but still devastating.
5. Michael (2018) - I don’t really need to explain this one much, simply put, first C5 in US since Andrew (in the same state!) and practically did same amount of damage too. Unusual for the fact it intensified all the way to landfall rather then weakening prior to.
6. Matthew (2016) - Caused a lot of deaths in Haiti and was the first C5 in 9 years. Also razed the SE US with impacts as well as the flooding in the Carolinas.
7. Florence (2018) - Surprisingly this one doesn’t end up higher on the list and part of that was likely due to the few states that received the worst. Barring that though this one was very complex and was initially gonna be a weak MDR storm and then it unexpectedly ramped up to a C4 which no one predicted at all, then set its sights on the US. The flooding from Florence was very bad in the Carolinas and especially that slow motion just inland prolonged it.
8. Irene (2011) - Despite being a minimal C3 this had some big impacts up here in Jersey. Lost power here for a few days and it did a good amount of damage to NYC but less then expected. However that flooding up there in Vermont and surrounding areas was pretty bad from what I heard.
9. Imelda (2019) - For such a low end storm this one was pretty destructive. Pretty much a scaled down Harvey on areas that had already been hit by Harvey and the fact that it just popped out of nowhere just as it was coming in was amazing.
10. Karl (2010) - Surprisingly this one ended up here because of the fact that it did a lot of damage in Mexico and somehow he didn’t get retired (then fell flat on his face 6 years later). $3B damages and showed the BoC is always a mysterious place for TCs.
If worldwide then I think the only three I think would be the most notable were:
1. Haiyan, WPac (2013) - One of the most intense TCs we’ve seen this pretty much laid waste to many Philippine towns and killed over 6,000 at that intensity. Truly horrific and I really hope they don’t get another storm like that again (Hagupit almost did the following year but it failed)
2. Patricia, EPac (2015) - Simply put, that intensity was amazing and something we'll very likely never see again in our lifetime (barring a near-impossible asteroid impact in an area where a strengthening TC was going but that’s not gonna happen so). Really good how we had recon right at the peak and I still believe it was stronger then Tip.
3. Noru, WPac (2017) - Despite being downed from a C5 in JTWC’s best track, this storm had quite the weirdest track and I think Leslie might’ve inherited some genes from him the following year in the Atlantic
