Hurricane Melissa strengthened right into a Class 4 storm because it churned northwest by way of the Caribbean Sea on Sunday, taking a direct goal at Jamaica, based on the newest advisory from the Nationwide Hurricane Middle (NHC).
A hurricane warning, which means that hurricane circumstances are anticipated, was in impact for Jamaica on Sunday, the NHC mentioned, in addition to some areas of Cuba. The hurricane additionally prompted a hurricane watch, which means that hurricane circumstances are attainable, for the southwestern peninsula of Haiti.
As of Sunday night, Melissa was positioned about 115 miles south of Kingston, Jamaica, transferring towards the west at 5 mph and remained a significant Class 4 storm, producing most sustained wind speeds of 145 mph.
If Melissa maintains its present energy, it may change into the strongest hurricane to make landfall over the island because the NHC began retaining data. The strongest hurricane on file to make landfall over Jamaica was Hurricane Gilbert in 1988, a Class 4 hurricane, with sustained winds of 130 mph.
This ABC Information graphic reveals the forecast for Hurricane Melissa.
ABC Information
Melissa is anticipated to proceed to trace west on Sunday evening and into Monday earlier than turning north and heading towards the southern coast of Jamaica later Monday into Tuesday.

Tropical Storm Melissa is seen over the Caribbean Sea, Oct. 25, 2025.
NOAA
Fueled by the nice and cozy waters of the Caribbean Sea and fewer wind shear, Melissa is forecast to strengthen, or on the very least preserve its main hurricane standing because it makes landfall over Jamaica by Tuesday morning.
Melissa was forecast to strengthen to a significant Class 5 hurricane by Monday, packing most sustained wind speeds of 160 mph. Some fluctuations in depth are attainable earlier than the storm makes landfall. On the very least, it’s anticipated to stay a robust Class 4 storm because it strikes over Jamaica on Tuesday.

Waves break on the coast forward of Hurricane Melissa, in Port Royal, Jamaica, on Oct. 25, 2025.
Gilbert Bellamy/Reuters
All airports in Jamaica have been closed as of late Sunday afternoon in anticipation of the storm, based on Jamaican authorities officers.
With torrential rainfall over the following few days, Hispaniola and Jamaica may obtain 15 to 30 inches of rain. Some components of the southern peninsula of Haiti and Jamaica doubtlessly may obtain as much as 40 inches of rain, probably leading to catastrophic and life-threatening flash flooding, in addition to quite a few landslides.
Harmful storm surge, surf and rip currents are additionally forecast. The NHC warned that the southern coast of Jamaica would see “life-threatening storm surge” from late Monday by way of to Tuesday morning, peaking between 9 and 13 ft above floor stage.

This ABC Information graphic reveals the forecast for Hurricane Melissa.
ABC Information
Winds will start selecting up throughout Jamaica on Sunday evening, with devastating hurricane-force winds arriving Monday and into Tuesday as the attention of the storm attracts nearer to the southern Jamaica shoreline.
As soon as it strikes throughout Jamaica, Melissa is anticipated to proceed north, then northeast on Tuesday and into Wednesday. It’ll probably make landfall a second time over japanese Cuba late Tuesday evening or early Wednesday morning, and will make landfall a 3rd time because it strikes close to or over the southeastern Bahamas and Turks and Caicos.

“Satellite tv for pc photos point out that most sustained winds have quickly elevated to close 140 mph [220 kmph] with increased gusts,” the NHC bulletin reported on Sunday.

This ABC Information graphic reveals the forecast for Hurricane Melissa.
ABC Information
The NHC has warned of attainable “in depth infrastructural harm, long-duration energy and communication outages and isolation of communities” in Jamaica and southwestern Haiti because of the storm.
Jap Cuba is anticipated to see between 6 and 18 inches of rainfall, additionally probably prompting harmful flash flooding and landslides.
