List of named storms (W)

Storms

 * Note: † indicates the name was retired after that usage in the respective basin


 * Walding
 * 1965 – caused heavy rains in Japan, 98 people were killed and 9 were missing due to the resulting flooding and landslides; also known as Trix beyond the Philippine Area of Responsibility (PAR).
 * 1977 – a powerful category 4 typhoon that changed course before reaching the coast of the Philippines; also known as Lucy beyond the PAR.
 * 1981 – a category 2 typhoon that passed off the coast of Japan; also known as Gay beyond the PAR.
 * 1989 – an intense typhoon in the Philippine Sea; also known as Irma beyond the PAR.
 * 1993 – a Category 3 typhoon that made landfall in southern China; also known as Abe beyond the PAR.


 * Waldo
 * 1985 – struck western Mexico and later brought heavy rainfall to the central United States, killing one person.
 * 1998 – tropical storm that hit Japan.


 * Wali (2014) – remained southeast of Hawaii.


 * Wallie (1965) – struck southern Mexico.


 * Wally
 * 1976 – formed, moved offshore, and later dissipated over Western Australia.
 * 1980† – killed 18 people when it struck Fiji.


 * Walt
 * 1991 – intense typhoon that passed northeast of Luzon; also known as Karing within the PAR.
 * 1994 – moved across southwestern Japan; also known as Miding within the PAR.


 * Walter
 * 1990 – tropical cyclone in central Indian Ocean; renamed Gregoara upon crossing 90º E.
 * 2001 – passed near Christmas Island and the Cocos Islands.


 * Waka (2001)† – one of the most damaging tropical cyclones to hit the island of Tonga in the South Pacific.


 * Wanda
 * 1945 – tropical storm that moved from the Philippines through the South China Sea.
 * 1951 – typhoon that moved through the Philippines, killing 82.
 * 1956 – typhoon that killed over 4,000 people in China.
 * 1959 – short-lived storm east of Hawaii.
 * 1962 – the most intense tropical cyclone on record in Hong Kong.
 * 1965 – April typhoon that dissipated near Palau.
 * 1967 – slow-moving typhoon that passed east of Japan.
 * 1971 – struck Vietnam, killing 56 people and grounding air operations in the ongoing war; also known as Diding within the PAR.
 * 1974 (January) – tropical storm that remained northeast of the Philippines; also known as Atang within the PAR.
 * 1974 (January)† – tropical storm that struck near Brisbane, Australia, killing 16 people.
 * 1977 – short-lived tropical storm south of Japan.
 * 2021 – a weak storm that meandered in the open Atlantic; developed from an extratropical nor'easter that affected much of the Northeastern United States.


 * Ward
 * 1992 – developed in the central Pacific Ocean then crossed the International Dateline and remained away from landmasses.
 * 1995 – intense typhoon that passed south of Japan; also known as Neneng within the PAR.
 * 2009 – a weak cyclonic storm that struck Sri Lanka.


 * Warling
 * 1971 – a Category 1 Typhoon that struck Taiwan causing severe flooding in Taipei; also known as Agnes beyond the PAR.
 * 1979 – the most intense tropical cyclone ever recorded with a minimum pressure of 870 mb. Tip also remains the largest tropical cyclone worldwide, with a wind diameter up to 1,380 miles (2,220 km) across. Tip weakened to a Category 1 typhoon before making landfall in Japan, killing nearly 100 people.
 * 1983 – killed 170 people when it drifted off the eastern Philippines, mostly related to the sinking of the MV Dona Cassandra; also known as Orchid beyond the PAR.
 * 1991 – crossed the central Philippines; also known as Wilda beyond the PAR.


 * Warren
 * 1981 – struck Hainan Island and Vietnam.
 * 1984 – meandered in the South China Sea due to the larger Typhoon Vanessa; also known as Reming within the PAR.
 * 1988 – struck southeastern China, where it destroyed 13,000 homes and killed 17; also known as Hauning beyond the PAR.
 * 1995† – struck Australia's Northern Territory.


 * Wasa (1991)† – powerful cyclone that left heavy damage in French Polynesia, later renamed Arthur.


 * Washi
 * 2005 – struck Hainan and Vietnam.
 * 2011† – a late-season tropical cyclone that caused around 1,200 to 1,500 deaths and catastrophic damage in the Philippines.


 * Wati (2006) – approached and moved southeastward away from the east coast of Australia.


 * Watorea (1976)† – moved along the east coast of Australia.


 * Wayne
 * 1979 – dissipated over Luzon.
 * 1983 – typhoon that killed 137 when it bypassed Luzon and Taiwan before striking southeastern China.
 * 1986 – lasted 22 days around the South China Sea, killing 490 in adjacent land masses.
 * 1989 – typhoon that struck Japan, killing 7.


 * Weling
 * 1978 – crossed the Philippines and later struck southern China.
 * 1982 – a destructive typhoon that moved through Vietnam and the Philippines during October 1982.
 * 1986 – passed northeast of Luzon.
 * 1994 – brushed northern Luzon before crossing Hainan and Vietnam.


 * Welming (1967)† – the second super Typhoon to hit the Philippines just 2 weeks after Typhoon Carla.


 * Welpring
 * 1964 – moved across Japan
 * 1976 – an intense typhoon that recurved northeast of the Philippines.
 * 1980 – passed south of Japan
 * 1984 – meandered off the east coast of the Philippines.
 * 1988 – developed over the Philippines and struck southern Vietnam.
 * 2000 – PAGASA name for Typhoon Soulik, which lasted until early January 2001.


 * Wendy
 * 1957 – crossed northern Luzon and southeastern China, killing 16.
 * 1960 – struck the Japanese island of Shikoku as a typhoon.
 * 1963 – hit Taiwan and eastern China.
 * 1965 – passed southeast of Japan.
 * 1968 – passed south of Taiwan and Hong Kong before striking southern China in Guangdong.
 * 1971 – passed east of Japan before dissipating over the Kamkatchka Peninsula
 * 1972† – a powerful cyclone that passed near Solomon Islands and New Caledonia.
 * 1974 – drifted near Luzon and Taiwan.
 * 1978 – typhoon that crossed Okinawa and later Kyushu.
 * 1999 – deadly tropical storm that killed 133 when it brushed Luzon and struck Guangdong in southern China.


 * Wene (2000) – crossed from the western Pacific into the central Pacific as a tropical storm.


 * Weng (2003) – crossed the Philippines and dissipated over Hainan, killing 13 people.


 * Wening
 * 1966 – dissipated north of Luzon.
 * 1970 – crossed southern Luzon before dissipating over the South China Sea off the Vietnamese coast.
 * 1974 – a category 2 typhoon hitting northern Luzon.


 * Wes (1998) – killed 10 people while moving near French Polynesia.


 * Wila (1988) – short-lived tropical storm southeast of Hawaii.


 * Wilda
 * 1955 – developed near the Marshall Islands and remained east of Guam.
 * 1959 – struck southern China and South Korea as a tropical depression.
 * 1961 – brought flooding rains to eastern Vietnam.
 * 1964 – killed 42 people when it struck Japan as a typhoon.
 * 1967 – remained east of the Philippines.
 * 1970 – typhoon that killed 11 people when it struck the Japanese island of Kyushu.
 * 1973 – developed over Luzon and hit southeastern China in Fujian.
 * 1976 – hit western Japan.
 * 1991 – moved across the Philippines.
 * 1994 – remained east of Guam and Japan.


 * Wilf (1979) – formed southwest of Indonesia, and was renamed Tropical Cyclone Danitza upon crossing 90º E.


 * Wilfred (2020) – formed south of the Cabo Verde Islands, and remained out to sea.


 * Willa
 * 1962 – short-lived tropical storm west of Mexico.
 * 1988 – formed well to the southeast of the Hawaiian Islands, never threatened land.
 * 2018 – a powerful tropical cyclone that brought torrential rains and destructive winds to southwestern Mexico, particularly the states of Sinaloa and Nayarit.


 * William
 * 1983 – formed near French Polynesia.
 * 1995† – damaging cyclone in the Cook Islands and French Polynesia.


 * Willy
 * 1984 – formed and dissipated west of Australia.
 * 1994 – passed near Cocos Islands.
 * 2005 – developed and dissipated off Western Australia.


 * Wilma
 * 1952 – a Category 5 super typhoon that affected the Philippines and mainland Southeast Asia.
 * 1975 – formed in the Arafura Sea and made landfall in the Northern Territory of Australia.
 * 2005† – an extremely powerful and destructive Category 5 hurricane that impacted Jamaica, Central America, Yucatan Peninsula, Cuba, South Florida, Bahamas, and Atlantic Canada.
 * 2011† – a Category 4 tropical cyclone that affected the Samoan Islands, Tonga and New Zealand.
 * 2013 – a long-lived storm that traversed the Philippines, mainland Southeast Asia, and then the Bay of Bengal before making landfall in India.


 * Wini (1987) – left heavy damage when it passed near the Samoas.


 * Winifred
 * 1986† – one of the worst tropical cyclones to make landfall in northern Queensland on record.
 * 1992 – a Category 3 hurricane that made landfall southeast of Manzanillo, Colima, causing minor damage.


 * Winnie
 * 1953 – remained northeast of Guam.
 * 1958 – killed 31 people while crossing Taiwan.
 * 1961 – struck Bangladesh, killing 11,468 people.
 * 1964 – crossed the Philippines and Hainan, killing around 100 people.
 * 1966 – hit Japan and South Korea as a tropical storm.
 * 1969 – dissipated between Luzon and Taiwan.
 * 1972 – hit eastern China as a tropical storm.
 * 1975 – typhoon that remained east of Japan.
 * 1978 (March) – cyclone off the west coast of Australia.
 * 1978 (November) – tropical storm that passed of Guam.
 * 1983 – the only December Pacific hurricane on record, which stalled off the southwest coast of Mexico.
 * 1997 – long-tracked typhoon that killed 372 people when it passed north of Taiwan and moved ashore in Zhejiang.
 * 2004† – weak but deadly tropical depression that moved across the Philippines, killing at least 842 people.


 * Winona
 * 1982 – killed people while crossing Luzon.
 * 1985 – damaged 7,500 houses in southeastern China.
 * 1989 – rare January Central Pacific storm that crossed much of the Pacific Ocean.
 * 1990 – developed from the remnants of Tropical Storm Tasha, and later struck Japan.
 * 1993 – moved across the Philippines and South China Sea.


 * Winsome (2001) – killed two people when it struck Australia's Northern Territory.


 * Winston (2016)† – strongest storm to hit Fiji on record, leaving 44 fatalities and US$1.6 billion in damage.


 * Wipha
 * 2007 – passed just north of Taiwan before striking Zhejiang, leaving US$1.3 billion in damage.
 * 2013 – struck southeastern Japan, killing 41 people.
 * 2013 – a large typhoon that caused extensive damage in Japan in mid-October 2013.
 * 2019 – caused significant damages in Vietnam and China.


 * Wukong
 * 2000 – struck Hainan and northern Vietnam.
 * 2006 – tropical storm that dropped torrential rainfall across Japan, killing two.
 * 2012 – moved across the Philippines on Christmas Day, killing 20 people.
 * 2018 – a severe tropical storm that never made landfall.


 * Wutip
 * 2001 – intense typhoon south of Japan.
 * 2007 – weak, sprawling tropical storm that killed 10 people.
 * 2013 – typhoon that struck eastern Vietnam, killing 65 people.
 * 2019 – category 5 typhoon that cost $3 million in damage.


 * Wynne
 * 1980 – strongest typhoon of the season, passed through Ryukyu Islands twice.
 * 1984 – passed between Taiwan and Luzon before striking China, killed three fishermen on Luzon.
 * 1987 – typhoon that weakened while passing east of Japan.