When Is Hurricane Season in Mexico? Month-by-Month Risk Guide for Cruise and Cozumel Travelers
Cozumel Cruise Tours
July 16, 2026
7 min read
Hurricane season in Mexico runs June through November, but the real risk is concentrated in just a few weeks. Here's the month-by-month breakdown for the Caribbean coast and Cozumel, what actually happens to cruises during storms, and how to book smart.
When Is Hurricane Season in Mexico? Month-by-Month Risk Guide for Cruise and Cozumel Travelers
Short answer: hurricane season in Mexico runs June 1 through November 30 on both coasts. Atlantic and Caribbean season officially spans June–November, while the Eastern Pacific season starts slightly earlier, on May 15. But the official window tells you very little about your actual vacation risk — because storm probability isn't spread evenly across those six months, and a "season" that sounds scary on paper coexists with some of the best travel deals and quietest beaches of the year.
This article breaks down the real month-by-month risk for Mexico's Caribbean coast — Cozumel, Cancún, and the Riviera Maya — what actually happens to cruises and tours when a storm approaches, and how to book confidently. For the complete planning reference, including storm-history data and cancellation policies, see our full hurricane season guide.
The Official Dates vs. the Real Risk Curve
Mexico sits between two storm basins:
Atlantic/Caribbean season: June 1 – November 30 (affects Cozumel, Cancún, Riviera Maya, Gulf coast)
Eastern Pacific season: May 15 – November 30 (affects Los Cabos, Puerto Vallarta, Acapulco)
Here's what the averages actually look like for the Caribbean side, where Cozumel sits:
Month
Risk Level
What It Typically Means
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Early-season systems are usually weak and short-lived
July
Low–moderate
Occasional storms; long stretches of classic summer weather
August
Moderate–high
Activity ramps up in the second half
September
Peak
Statistical peak (around Sept 10); highest probability month
October
Moderate–high
Still active in the western Caribbean; risk declines late month
November
Low
Season winds down quickly; rarely a factor after mid-month
The key insight: roughly 80% of major hurricane activity is concentrated from mid-August through mid-October. June, July, and November are "hurricane season" in name, but their storm probability on any given week is small. December through May, tropical storms are essentially a non-factor — that's the island's famous dry season.
What Hurricane Season Actually Feels Like in Cozumel
Booking in hurricane season does not mean vacationing in a storm. Even in September, the single likeliest outcome for any given week is... normal Caribbean summer: hot mornings, glassy seas, a brief afternoon shower, spectacular sunsets.
Typical summer/fall pattern on the island:
Mornings: calm, clear, and hot — the best snorkeling and diving conditions of the day
Afternoons: building clouds, often a short tropical downpour (30–60 minutes)
Evenings: clearing skies
Water temperature runs 82–86°F (28–30°C), visibility on the reefs remains world-class, and crowds are dramatically thinner than winter high season. Prices follow: hotels, flights, and tours are at their cheapest August–October. Budget-minded travelers who understand the odds get the island at its emptiest and most affordable — see current tour deals if you're eyeing shoulder-season dates.
What Happens to Cruises When a Storm Forms?
This is the part most first-time cruisers don't realize: cruise ships don't sail into hurricanes — they sail around them. Modern forecasting gives cruise lines days of lead time, and ships travel faster than storm systems. When a hurricane threatens the western Caribbean, the typical outcomes are:
Itinerary swap: your Cozumel stop becomes a different port (or vice versa — ships often get added to Cozumel when eastern Caribbean ports close)
Order shuffle: same ports, different sequence, dodging the storm's track
Sea day substitution: occasionally a port is skipped entirely
Actual cruise cancellations are rare. What this means for excursion planning: book tours with flexible cancellation policies. Reputable local operators offer full refunds when your ship doesn't arrive — it's an industry norm on the island because everyone's business depends on ship schedules. Check the frequently asked questions for how storm-related changes are handled, and read guest reviews to see how operators have treated travelers when weather forced changes.
For land-based visitors, hotels on Cozumel are built to modern hurricane codes, the island has well-practiced civil protection protocols, and airlines typically issue travel waivers days before any serious system arrives.
Month-by-Month: When Should You Book?
December – April (dry season): Zero hurricane concern, low humidity, 75–85°F. This is peak season — best weather, biggest crowds, highest prices. Book tours well ahead.
May: A sleeper favorite. Technically pre-season on the Caribbean side, hot and mostly dry, with shoulder-season pricing.
June – July: Excellent value with low storm odds. Summer vacation crowds are moderate. Afternoon showers are brief. Great months for families balancing budget and weather.
August: Fine in the first half; risk builds late month. Watch forecasts within 10 days of travel, but don't fear the calendar.
September: The statistical peak and the cheapest month of the year. If you travel now, buy travel insurance, choose refundable bookings, and stay forecast-aware. The reward: the island at its quietest.
October: Still active early, improving steadily. Late October is often lovely.
November: Season effectively over by mid-month; crowds haven't arrived yet. Another underrated window.
If you're weighing hurricane odds against crowds, prices, and water conditions in more detail, our seasonal breakdown in things to do in Cozumel pairs each season with the activities it suits best.
Smart Booking Rules for Hurricane Season Travel
Buy travel insurance with weather coverage — and buy it before a storm is named. Once a system has a name, it's an excluded "foreseeable event" on new policies.
Book refundable everything August–October: flights with credit options, hotels with 24–48h cancellation, tours with ship-miss/weather refunds.
Don't cancel early. Forecast cones more than five days out are wide; most "threats" never materialize at any specific location. Wait for airline waivers rather than eating change fees.
Track the right sources: the National Hurricane Center (nhc.noaa.gov) for official forecasts, not social media hype.
Morning-load your itinerary. In any month, Cozumel's weather is best before 2 PM — book water activities early and keep afternoons flexible.
Have a plan-your-day backup. If seas close one activity, another usually runs — our plan your day tool helps build an itinerary with alternates.
Questions People Also Ask
What months are worst for hurricanes in Mexico?
September is the statistical peak on both coasts, with late August and early October close behind. Mid-August to mid-October accounts for the large majority of severe activity.
Is it safe to visit Cozumel during hurricane season?
Yes — with normal precautions. On any given week, even in peak season, the overwhelmingly likely outcome is standard tropical weather. Modern forecasting provides days of warning, and the island's tourism infrastructure is experienced with storm protocols.
When was Cozumel last hit by a major hurricane?
The benchmark remains Wilma in October 2005, which stalled over the island. Since then, Cozumel has seen brushes and near-misses (like Delta and Zeta in 2020) but rebounded quickly each time — reef tourism resumed within days to weeks.
Do cruise lines refund missed ports?
Cruise lines refund port fees for skipped stops but generally don't compensate beyond that for itinerary changes. Independently booked excursions are refunded by reputable operators when the ship doesn't arrive — confirm the policy in writing when booking.
Is hurricane season the same in Cancún and Cozumel?
Yes — they're 50 miles apart on the same coast and share the same June–November season and the same peak weeks.
The Bottom Line
When is hurricane season in Mexico? Officially June through November — but practically, the weeks that deserve real attention run from mid-August to mid-October, peaking in September. Outside that core window, "hurricane season" mostly means warmer water, afternoon showers, thinner crowds, and the best prices of the year. Inside it, insurance plus refundable bookings turn a scary-sounding calendar into a manageable — often brilliant — travel bet.
For storm-history data, cancellation policy details, and a printable planning checklist, read the complete Cozumel hurricane season guide before you book.