Hurricane Melissa's eye is captured by NOAA satellite as the sun rises, as the Category 5 storm, with peaked sustained winds of 185 mph and gusts of more than 200 mph, approaches the island of Jamaica.
On Oct 28, 2025, a Copernicus Sentinel-2 satellite captured a vivid view of Hurricane Melissa's eye a few hours before landfall on Jamaica's southern coast.
A color-adjusted satellite photo shows Hurricane Patricia on Oct. 23, 2015, the day its peak sustained winds reached 215 mph as the storm approached the coast of Mexico from the Eastern Pacific.
A sign at the Mt. Washington Observatory in New Hampshire commemorates a wind speed record set there in April 1934.
NHRA top fuel driver Tony Stewart (left) races alongside Brittany Force as she runs the fastest speed in NHRA history at 343.16 mph during qualifying for the Sonoma Nationals at Sonoma Raceway on Jul 25, 2025 at Sonoma Raceway in Sonoma, CA.

With a gust in Hurricane Melissa setting a record for peak gust measured by a specialized instrument dropped into the eye of a hurricane – 252 mph – you might be wondering what are the fastest speeds ever recorded.

The question, like many, can take you down a rabbit hole, with a lot of nuance based on who's measuring and what's being measured, but we turned to a few sources of authority for a look at some of the top speeds in nature, and in cars.

The World Meteorological Organization keeps an official record of weather and climate extremes.

The strongest recorded surface wind is 253 mph, according to the Rapporteur of Weather and Climate Extremes for the WMO project, Randall Cerveny, a professor of Geographical Sciences at Arizona State University.

That wind was measured at Barrow Island, Australia by an automated weather station during Tropical Cyclone Olivia on April 10, 1996. The WMO uses only speeds recorded by instruments, not estimates or calculations, but at this time does not maintain records for dropsonde measurements.

The Hurricane Melissa wind gust is the highest wind speed ever recorded by the expendable instruments, called dropsondes, that are deployed into hurricanes, according to the National Center for Atmospheric Research at the National Science Foundation, where the instruments were developed.

"While we at WMO don't officially list that dropsonde record, I can definitely say that it is nevertheless an incredible measurement," Cerveny said. "I doff my meteorology hat to Adam Hazelton and the rest of the Hurricane Hunter crews for taking such superb measurements … and for their superb work in keeping us all safe."

Hazelton, an associate scientist with the University of Miami, was aboard a flight with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, monitoring the information streaming in from the expendable instruments called dropsondes that were being dropped into the eye of Melissa when the 252 mph appeared in the data. The dropsonde captured the measurement at a height of about 700 feet, as the instrument fell toward the ocean south of Jamaica.

Other record wind speeds listed by the WMO are:

215 mph – Most intense winds by maximum sustained surface winds, recorded during Typhoon Nancy in the Northwest Pacific Ocean on September 12, 1961 and during Hurricane Patricia in the eastern Pacific on Oct. 23, 2015.

231 mph – The maximum wind gust ever recorded in the western or northern hemisphere, on New Hampshire's Mount Washington on April 12, 1934. It's marked by a sign commemorating "the highest wind ever observed by man."

302 mph – The highest recorded tornadic wind speed, during the Bridge Creek, Oklahoma tornado in May 1999.

For context, here are some of the fastest speeds by wheeled vehicles on land:

343.16 mph – The fastest drag speed ever recorded in National Hot Rod Association history was set by Brittany Force on July 25, 2025 in Sonoma, California, according to the association.

763.035 mph – The world land speed record was set over one mile in 1997 by the ThrustSSC, a twin turbofan jet-powered car driven by Andy Green, according to the Federation Internationale de l'Automobile.

Dinah Voyles Pulver, a national correspondent for USA TODAY, writes about climate change, violent weather and other news. Reach her at dpulver@usatoday.com or @dinahvp on Bluesky or X or dinahvp.77 on Signal

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: 'Highest wind ever observed by man'? A new reading challenges history.

Reporting by Dinah Voyles Pulver, USA TODAY / USA TODAY

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