Tropical Storm Dexter formed late on August 3, 2025, over the western Atlantic Ocean, east of North Carolina and north of Bermuda, marking the fourth named storm of the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season, according to the National Hurricane Center (NHC). The storm is expected to move away from the U.S. East Coast, remaining over open waters without making landfall or posing a direct threat to the United States. Dexter is currently weakening but could strengthen again as it moves out to sea. Meanwhile, the NHC is monitoring two additional systems in the Atlantic—a disturbance offshore Florida and a wave in the central Atlantic—with about a 30% chance of development over the next week. Despite these potential developments, no new named storms are anticipated in the immediate future. The storm's trajectory does not present a danger to the U.S., and it is not expected to impact the UK weather significantly. However, a separate disturbance in the southeastern U.S. may bring some cloud cover and spotty showers to the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area through midweek.
Trayectoria de la tormenta tropical Dexter: el fenómeno no representa peligro para EE.UU. https://t.co/1gA0O36Dmq
With Dexter drifting out to sea, there's still two more systems to keep an eye on. Here's the latest. https://t.co/lNCmjpv4Fm https://t.co/XA4vCdwRiP
The National Hurricane Center is tracking three Atlantic systems: Tropical Storm Dexter, a Florida offshore disturbance, and a central Atlantic wave. https://t.co/L7UoeQ47WS