The name Iris was used for sixteen tropical cyclones worldwide. Three in the Atlantic Ocean, ten in the West Pacific, one in the South-West Indian Ocean, and two in the Southwest Pacific Ocean. It has also been used once in Europe.
In the Atlantic:
- Tropical Storm Iris (1989) – did not become strong or threaten land due to interaction with Hurricane Hugo, but dropped heavy rain on areas already drenched by Hugo.
- Hurricane Iris (1995) – moved up the Leeward Islands, causing four deaths on Martinique, later reached Europe as a strong extratropical storm.
- Hurricane Iris (2001) – struck Belize as a Category 4 storm, killing several in Central America, including 20 on a ship that capsized off the coast. Caused $66 million in damage to Belize.
The name Iris was retired after the 2001 season, and was replaced by Ingrid in the 2007 season.
In the Western Pacific:
- Typhoon Iris (1951) (T5104) – Category 5
- Typhoon Iris (1955) (T5519) – Category 1
- Typhoon Iris (1959) (T5908, 18W) – Category 2 which struck China.
- Tropical Storm Iris (1962) (T6204, 22W)
- Typhoon Iris (1964) (T6428, 43W) – Category 1 which struck Vietnam.
- Tropical Storm Iris (1967) (T6716, 18W, Oniang)
- Typhoon Iris (1970) (T7018, 19W) – Category 3
- Typhoon Iris (1973) (T7310, 10W) – Category 2
- Typhoon Iris (1976) (T7620, 20W) – Category 1
- Tropical Storm Iris (1999) (02W, Bebeng, Japan Meteorological Agency analyzed it as a tropical depression, not as a tropical storm.)
In the Southwest Indian Ocean:
In the South Pacific:
In Europe:
- Storm Isha – Named Iris by the Free University of Berlin (FUB).
If an internal link incorrectly led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended storm article. Categories: