Erick

Dissipated

Active from June 16, 2025 at 06:00 PM to June 20, 2025 at 12:00 AM

Track map of Erick

Peak Category

Dissipated

Minimum Pressure

hPa

Maximum Wind Speed

198 km/h

Region

East Pacific

Key Events

Formation

June 16, 2025 at 06:00 PM

10.4°N, -91.5°E

Dissipation

June 20, 2025 at 12:00 AM

17.8°N, -100.3°E

Storm Timeline

Erick formed as Tropical Storm at 10.4°N, -91.5°E with winds of 47 km/h

June 17, 2025 at 12:00 AM: maintain at 11.0°N, -92.4°E

Erick intensified to Tropical Storm at 11.7°N, -93.3°E with winds of 54 km/h

Erick intensified to Tropical Storm at 12.1°N, -93.9°E with winds of 61 km/h

Erick intensified to Tropical Storm at 12.6°N, -94.1°E with winds of 72 km/h

Erick intensified to Tropical Storm at 12.9°N, -94.6°E with winds of 79 km/h

Erick intensified to Tropical Storm at 13.1°N, -95.1°E with winds of 86 km/h

Erick intensified to Category 1 at 13.6°N, -95.7°E with winds of 112 km/h

Erick intensified to Category 2 at 14.2°N, -96.3°E with winds of 144 km/h

Erick intensified to Category 2 at 14.9°N, -96.7°E with winds of 166 km/h

Erick reached peak intensity as Category 3 at 15.5°N, -97.5°E with winds of 198 km/h

Erick weakened to Category 2 at 16.4°N, -98.4°E with winds of 151 km/h

Erick weakened to Category 1 at 17.1°N, -99.3°E with winds of 104 km/h

Erick dissipated at 17.8°N, -100.3°E

Hurricane Erick 2025: When the Pacific Unleashed Record Fury

The Ocean's Silent Incubator

Beneath a deceptively calm June sky south of Mexico, the Pacific Ocean simmered. Sea surface temperatures, running 1.5°C above normal, became Erick's primal fuel. What began as a disorganized tropical wave on June 10 transformed with terrifying speed. By June 17, Erick was named a tropical storm; within 24 explosive hours, it achieved Category 4 status—winds rocketing 80 mph (130 km/h) faster than any Eastern Pacific hurricane on record. At dawn on June 19, Erick’s 145 mph (230 km/h) winds screamed towards the Oaxacan coast, its 939 mbar pressure core a vacuum sucking the ocean upward.

Landfall: Nature's Hammer on Human Shores

Imagine the terror in Pinotepa Nacional as Erick’s eyewall, still packing Category 3 fury (125 mph winds), made landfall. Roofs became projectiles. In San Pedro Pochutla, Oaxaca, a man was crushed by collapsing walls. Near the Guerrero border in San Marcos, floodwaters swallowed a child whole—two of Erick’s first Mexican victims. The storm surge, a monstrous wall of water reaching 10 meters (33 feet), devoured beaches and smashed into Acapulco—a city still scarred by 2023’s Hurricane Otis. Streets transformed into raging rivers, trapping residents as 277,000 customers plunged into darkness. By afternoon, Erick had weakened to a tropical storm 35 miles north-northeast of Acapulco, but its legacy of water was just beginning.

Inland: Water's Deadly March

As Erick’s winds faded over Mexico’s mountains, its true killer emerged: rain. 16 inches deluged Oaxaca and Guerrero within hours. Mudslides, thick as concrete, buried roads and isolated villages. In Guatemala’s rugged highlands, 18 perished when sodden hillsides collapsed onto homes; one victim remained missing. Honduras reported two dead in Santa Bárbara. Even distant San Luis Potosí, far from Erick’s initial strike, recorded a fatality and a missing person as swollen rivers burst banks. The economic toll mounted: $205 million USD in damages, including Mex$210 million (US$11.6 million) in ruined papaya crops—lifelines for coastal Afro-Mexican communities where 9 out of 10 families reported devastating losses from Erick's winds and floods.

Humanity's Gauntlet: Shelters, Soldiers, and Sweat

Against Erick’s onslaught, Mexico mobilized. 2,000 shelters sprang open across Chiapas, Guerrero, and Oaxaca. In Guerrero, 582 shelters received evacuees as classes were canceled and beaches closed. President Claudia Sheinbaum’s urgent warnings blared from radios: "Stay inside!" 18,000 first responders and 6,418 Mexican Navy personnel deployed into the maelstrom. Teams cleared drainage canals in Acapulco under horizontal rain; in Puerto Escondido, volunteers sheltered 90 stray dogs from Erick’s wrath. All Hands and Hearts navigated shattered roads to reach isolated Afro-Mexican villages near Pinotepa Nacional, distributing aid where Erick had stripped papaya groves bare. The government committed Mex$18 billion (US$946 million) to rebuild, a testament to the scale of Erick’s destruction.

Context: A Storm That Rewrote the Calendar

Erick wasn’t just destructive; it was historic. As the fifth named storm of the 2025 Eastern Pacific season, it formed earlier than any fifth storm on record (surpassing June 25, 2021). Its landfall as a major hurricane on June 19 shattered the previous Mexican record by over two months (previously August 26, 1989). NOAA’s prediction of an above-average season (13-19 named storms) seemed validated by Erick’s ferocious early appearance. Scientists pointed to the anomalous ocean heat—a likely fingerprint of climate change—as the catalyst for Erick’s terrifyingly rapid intensification, a warning of future threats.

Echoes in the Ruins

By June 21, Erick had dissipated over Jalisco, leaving 23 dead, 28 injured, and 2 missing across Mexico and Central America. Its path—from record-breaking ocean beast to deadly inland floodmaker—highlighted the multifaceted danger of modern hurricanes. For Acapulco, still rebuilding from Otis, Erick was a traumatic echo. For Oaxaca’s papaya farmers, it was economic ruin. For climate scientists, Erick was a data point screaming urgency: warmer oceans breed faster, stronger, earlier monsters. The $205 million recovery had begun, but the memory of those 10-meter waves and the child lost in San Marcos would linger far longer than Erick’s winds.