Maybe 2009 is a good analog for the 2026 NATL season? From Wiki.
The 2009 Atlantic hurricane season was a below-average season, primarily due to the development of a strong El Niño in the Pacific, which increased vertical wind shear and suppressed storm formation. It was the quietest season since 1997, featuring the lowest number of tropical cyclones since that yea
Season Statistics
Total Named Storms: 9
Hurricanes: 3 (Bill, Fred, Ida)
Major Hurricanes (Cat 3+): 2 (Bill, Fred)
Total Fatalities: 6 direct deaths in the U.S. (9 total)
Total Damage: Approximately $58 million to $77 million (2009 USD)
Accumulated Cyclone Energy (ACE): 52.6, well below the long-term median
Key Storms & Landfalls
Hurricane Bill: The strongest storm of the season, reaching Category 4 intensity with winds of 135 mph. It affected the Leeward Islands, Bermuda, and made landfall in Newfoundland, Canada.
Hurricane Fred: A rare major hurricane that formed in the far eastern Atlantic near the Cape Verde Islands.
Hurricane Ida: Formed in November and made landfall in Nicaragua as a Category 1 hurricane before hitting Alabama as a tropical storm.
Tropical Storm Claudette: The only tropical cyclone to make landfall in the United States (Florida Panhandle.
