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A Quiet Hurricane Forecast Can Still Be Costly for Florida Businesses

NOAA is forecasting a below-normal 2026 Atlantic hurricane season, with 8 to 14 named storms, 3 to 6 hurricanes, and 1 to 3 major hurricanes.

A quieter season may bring fewer storms overall. One storm near your location can still damage property, interrupt operations, flood a building, close roads, knock out utilities, delay suppliers, keep employees away from work, and reduce revenue for days or weeks.

Hurricane risk is local to the business

A seasonal forecast gives a broad view of expected storm activity. Business risk depends on the location, property, operations, employees, vendors, customers, and coverage involved.

  • A restaurant may need to account for refrigeration, spoilage, utilities, employee access, and customer traffic.
  • A contractor may need to account for tools, equipment, vehicles, job sites, materials, and delayed projects.
  • A property owner may need to account for building damage, tenant access, repairs, rent interruption, and lease obligations.
  • A retail business may need to account for inventory, storefront damage, power outages, security, and customer access.
  • A business review should focus on the damage, downtime, access problems, employee disruption, supplier delays, and revenue loss one nearby storm could create.

Review coverage and continuity before storm activity increases

Florida business owners should review:

  • Wind, hurricane, and named storm coverage
  • Deductibles
  • Commercial property limits
  • Flood insurance
  • Lost income and extra expense coverage
  • Utility interruption, access, and supplier disruption
  • Lease obligations
  • Documentation and communication plans

Once a storm is approaching Florida, coverage options may be limited, and operational decisions become more urgent.

This is the first article in our Florida Business Hurricane Readiness Series. The next article focuses on wind coverage, hurricane deductibles, named-storm coverage, and commercial property limits.

Next article: Florida Businesses Should Review Wind, Hurricane, and Property Coverage

Sterling Meadows Insurance can help Florida business owners review commercial coverage, identify potential gaps, and prepare for storm-related risks before hurricane season becomes active.