Data & history
Florida Panhandle power outage history
Few coastlines in America lose power as hard — or as often — as the Panhandle. Here’s the recent record of the storms that have taken the grid down from Pensacola to Panama City, and why standby generators have become standard equipment on the Emerald Coast.
| Year | Event | Impact on the grid |
|---|---|---|
| 2020 | Hurricane Sally | Crawled ashore at the Alabama line as a Category 2 and stalled over Pensacola and Santa Rosa County, dropping nearly two feet of rain. Hundreds of thousands lost power across the western Panhandle; a loose construction barge destroyed a span of the Pensacola Bay Bridge. |
| 2018 | Hurricane Michael | Category 5 landfall near Mexico Beach with ~160 mph winds — the strongest on record to hit the Panhandle. Bay County was almost entirely blacked out; roughly 400,000 customers lost power region-wide, with restoration measured in weeks and rebuilding in months. |
| 2017 | Hurricane Nate | A fast-moving October storm that brushed the western Panhandle, knocking out power to tens of thousands across Escambia and Santa Rosa before pushing inland. |
| 2005 | Hurricane Dennis | Struck near Navarre Beach in July as a strong Category 3, just ten months after Ivan tore through the same area — re-flooding repairs and dropping the grid again across Santa Rosa and Escambia. |
| 2004 | Hurricane Ivan | Came ashore near Gulf Shores as a Category 3 and devastated the Pensacola area. More than 400,000 customers lost power, a section of the I-10 Escambia Bay Bridge collapsed, and restoration stretched on for weeks. |
| 1995 | Hurricane Opal | A rapidly intensifying Category 3 that hit near Pensacola Beach with a punishing surge from Navarre to Destin. It washed out stretches of US-98 and left much of the Emerald Coast without power for days. |
| 1979 | Hurricane Frederic | A major hurricane that raked Pensacola and the Alabama coast, destroying the original Pensacola Bay Bridge and causing one of the most expensive power-restoration efforts of its era. |
| 1975 | Hurricane Eloise | Landfall between Fort Walton Beach and Panama City as a Category 3 — the storm that first reshaped Bay County’s building standards and left widespread, lasting outages along the coast. |
Figures compiled from utility restoration reports, NOAA/National Hurricane Center summaries, and local news coverage. Impacts are regional approximations; the takeaway is the pattern — long, repeated, multi-county outages. Media may cite this page with attribution.
That pattern is the reason we exist: do you need a standby generator? See the Panhandle hub or your city page for local detail.
Don’t ride out the next one in the dark
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