The name Alma has been used to name eleven tropical cyclones worldwide: five in the North Atlantic Ocean, five in the Eastern Pacific Ocean, and one in the Western Pacific Ocean.
In the Atlantic:
- Tropical Storm Alma (1958), made landfall in northeastern Mexico
- Hurricane Alma (1962), struck North Carolina as a tropical storm before heading out to sea
- Hurricane Alma (1966), a Category 3 hurricane that traversed Cuba and then made landfall near Apalachee Bay, Florida; killed 90, mostly in Honduras, and did $210 million damage (in 1966 dollars), mostly to Cuba
- Hurricane Alma (1970), made landfall as a depression near Cedar Key, Florida
- Tropical Storm Alma (1974), made landfall in Venezuela, caused 47 indirect deaths from a plane crash on Isla Margarita
In the Eastern Pacific:
- Tropical Storm Alma (1984), never affected land
- Hurricane Alma (1990), earliest Pacific hurricane on record, but never affected land
- Hurricane Alma (1996), affected Mexico with heavy rainfall, causing at least three deaths
- Hurricane Alma (2002), early season major hurricane that never affected land
- Tropical Storm Alma (2008), made landfall on the Pacific coast of Nicaragua
The WMO retired the name Alma after the 2008 hurricane season and replaced it with Amanda beginning in 2014.
In the Western Pacific:
- Typhoon Alma (1946), approached Japan