The tropical storm ranked to tropical depression has now been reduced after it has achieved land early on Sunday.
The storm achieved a landing near Leesfield Beach, South Carolina, according to the National Hurricane Center. The maximum of its sustainable winds decreased to 35 miles per hour. Chantal is currently moving to the north at a speed of 9 miles per hour.
As of 11 am East time, the Chantal Center was about 20 miles southwest of Lombon, North Carolina, or about 80 miles to Wellington, North Carolina, according to the National Hurricane Center.
All tropical storm warnings have been stopped and the storm is expected to dissipate later.
ABC news fee shows a decline in the tropical storm at approximately 5 am on Sunday, July 6, 2025.
ABC News
About an hour after making land at about four in the morning, Chaantal weakened, with sustainable winds and then up to 50 miles per hour.
The scattered shower and thunderstorms of the external gangs of Cantal continues to influence parts of South Carolina’s inner inheritors, where the shower is more concentrated and thunderstorm than the internal chaantal teams from the southern and northern Carolina coast line at home.
The tropical storm clock was stopped from Edisto Beach to the South Santi River, South Carolina, including Charleston.

The ABC News fee shows the expected track of the Chantal Storm from 2 am on Sunday, July 6, 2025.
ABC News

ABC news fee shows alerts of the Chantal Storm from 5 am on Sunday, July 6, 2025.
ABC News
Chantal is expected to continue with weakness as it moves inward, most likely to become tropical depression later and dispel by Monday.
The storm is expected to produce scattered shorts, and some areas will witness heavy rains and winds of thunderstorms throughout the day.
Flood hours remain valid at least until Sunday night from Mercle Beach to the west of Wilmengton, North Carolina. The flood hours are expected to extend to parts of the internal state of North Carolina, including Weaitville and Rally, until Monday.

A graph of ABC News shows flood hours for the tropical storm Chantal as of 5 am on Sunday, July 6, 2025.
ABC News
Chantal, the third storm called the Atlantic Hurricane Season, is expected to bring 2 to 4 inches from rain to parts of East Carolinas, with isolated amounts of up to 6 inches that can cause flash floods.
Thunderstorms from Chantal gangs may also produce isolated hurricanes, as well as lightning winds and stormy winds.
The storm was also expected to bring slight storms to parts of the Carolina coast, ranging from 1 to 3 feet from increasing the storm during the high tide of coastal areas under the tropical storm warnings.