Climate consultants within the UK, Eire and the Netherlands have introduced the brand new checklist of names for the 2025/26 ‘storm season’, which begins at present and runs till 31 August 2026, simply weeks after Storm Floris.
Of the list of 21 names, each of the national partners contributed seven, with some names chosen from pubic submissions. The Met Office takes suggestions through an online form.
Here’s what you need to know.
What are the storm names for 2025/26?
Top of this year’s list are Amy, Bram and Chandra. The rest of the names are below.
The 2025/26 storm names
Met Office
The UK’s most recent storm, Storm Floris, was the sixth names from last season’s list.
The name Floris is of Dutch origin and is also used a variant of the French name Florence.
Floris comes from the Latin word florens, meaning to “prosper” or “flourish”. The County of Holland had five powerful monarchs who also went by the name Floris.
Why are there no storms named with the letters Q, U, X, Y, and Z?
Only 21 letters in the alphabet are included in the list of storm names as it is challenging to come up with six appropriate names (one for each of the six rotating lists), beginning with Q, U, X, Y, and Z.
You will never see your name on the list of storms in case your identify begins with these letters.
How are storm names chosen?
A collaboration between the Met Workplace, Met Éireann (the Irish meteorological service), and KNMI (the Dutch meteorological service) names storms within the UK. This naming course of is designed to make the general public extra conscious of extreme climate occasions and to make sure that individuals take mandatory precautions when such storms are forecasted.
Every service has chosen seven names on the alphabetical checklist (excluding the letters q, u, x, y and z).
Annually, the UK Met Workplace, in collaboration with Met Éireann and KNMI, releases an inventory of names for the upcoming storm season. The names are chosen alphabetically, alternating between female and male names.
A storm is called when it’s anticipated to have a major affect, significantly whether it is forecasted to deliver sturdy winds, heavy rain, or snow that might trigger substantial injury or pose a danger to life.
The choice to call a storm is predicated on the potential for an amber or purple warning (excessive or very excessive affect) to be issued.
The Met Workplace and Met Éireann launched their first “Title our Storms” marketing campaign in 2015. The custom of naming storms started within the US in 1950 to assist individuals “interact with climate forecasts”.
Met Éireann in April 2024 named Storm Kathleen after two Irish scientists, Kathleen McNulty and Kathleen Lonsdale.
You may study extra concerning the storm naming course of here.
Consultants say storms are named to reinforce communication and public security. A particular identify makes it simpler for individuals to recollect and focus on a storm, decreasing confusion, particularly when a number of storms are energetic concurrently.
This readability helps constantly disseminate warnings and ensures that media, authorities businesses, and the general public all confer with the identical occasion.
Moreover, naming storms will increase public consciousness and urgency, prompting individuals to take mandatory precautions. A named storm tends to obtain extra media protection, serving to to unfold vital security info. General, the follow simplifies communication, improves preparedness, and aids within the efficient coordination of emergency responses.
Rebekah Hicks, Chief Meteorologist on the UK Met Workplace mentioned: “Naming storms isn’t nearly giving them a label, it’s about ensuring individuals take discover. When a storm has a reputation, it turns into simpler for the media and public to speak about it, share info, and put together.

