Category 6 hurricane isn’t coming to Florida, Carolinas

Category 6 hurricanes don’t exist, and meteorologists won’t be tracking a storm that’s expected to make landfall in early September, as viral videos on TikTok claim.
Government agencies such as FEMA is urging preparation when we’re close peak of the Atlantic hurricane season in September.
Two TikTok goes viral video declared a Category 6 hurricane making landfall in the Florida and Carolinas in early September. The claim appeared to originate from a self-described “time traveler” who has posted other prediction videos on TikTok.
Although some in the comments of the video expressed skepticism about the claims, online search data displayed Others are wondering if a Category 6 hurricane is predicted to make landfall in the Florida and Carolinas.
QUESTION
A Category 6 hurricane predicted to make landfall in Florida and the Carolinas in early September?
SOURCES
ANSWER

No, a Category 6 hurricane is not expected to make landfall in the Florida and Carolinas in early September.
WHAT WE FIND
The claims of viral videos of a hurricane making landfall in the Florida and Carolinas in early September are false.
Category 6 hurricanes do not exist, and weather models cannot predict them.
The Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale includes five categories of estimates of property damage that can result from hurricanes. The scale is a 1 to 5 rating based on the storm’s maximum sustained wind speed, according to the National Hurricane Center (NHS).
The NHS says any storm rated Category 3 or higher is referred to as a “major storm”, which can cause catastrophic damage and significant loss of life due to their winds.
The highest rating on the scale is a Category 5 hurricane, generating wind speeds of 157 mph or more. Category 6 ratings do not exist.
Meteorologists also won’t currently be tracking a storm that is expected to hit September 4 or September 6, both of which are dates that viral TikTok videos refer to.
According to Bobby Deskins, chief meteorologist at the VERIFY WTSP partner station, the models predict the most accurate weather over time frames of 5 to 7 days.
“Anything beyond that and you don’t trust models much,” says Deskins. “So to say that something will happen in three [or] four weeks – especially with the specifics they talked about in that video – that’s not something we do.”
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) give a hurricane forecast for 2023 at the end of May.
That forecast predicts 12 to 17 named storms with winds of 39 mph or higher. Five to nine of these can become hurricanes, including one to four major hurricanes. NOAA says it has “70% confidence in these ranges.”
Hurricane forecasts do not list specific areas where storms will develop or make landfall.
Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at UCLA, told VERIFY that “no specific hurricanes are expected to hit Florida in the near future, although of course there is the potential to exist later in the day.” this season with storms that have yet to form.”