Hurricane Erin (2025) is currently active and affecting Bermuda and Atlantic Canada. It is not expected to make landfall in the United States but is bringing dangerous surf, rip currents, and flooding threats along the East Coast. Erin's tropical-storm-force winds extend about 575 miles across, making it a very large hurricane. The storm is traveling north-northwest near the U.S. East Coast and is expected to bring tropical storm conditions to the Outer Banks of North Carolina by late Wednesday, August 20, 2025. It is also predicted that Hurricane Erin will weaken and transition into a post-tropical system as it moves near New England and Atlantic Canada towards the end of the week. Erin is forecasted to continue moving northeastward away from the U.S. by the weekend and then head eastward across the North Atlantic towards the United Kingdom. However, by the time it reaches the UK, it will have diminished significantly, no longer classifying as a hurricane or tropical storm. In summary, Hurricane Erin is not currently expected to make direct landfall but will continue to affect coastal regions with hazardous weather conditions through late August 2025. The exact timing of specific impacts varies by location, but the Outer Banks were expecting tropical storm conditions starting late Wednesday, August 20, 2025, with the storm moving northeastward thereafter.