Dikeledi originally formed south of Java, Indonesia as a tropical low on 30 December 2024 and was assigned the designation
08U by the
BoM before traversing the southern Indian Ocean into the RSMC La Reunion area of responsibility late on 4 January 2025. Advanced scatterometer data on 6 January indicated that the low-level circulation was elongated with max winds present at on the southern side. Meteo-France also stated the associated convection was still poorly organized, but nonetheless it began to issue warnings at 12:00 UTC the same day while classifying the system as a Zone of Disturbed Weather. The Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) issued a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert (TCFA) on this system on 7 January as it became better organized. On the following day, Meteo-France upgraded 05 to a tropical depression, with deep convection having developed and microwave overpass images suggesting the circulation beginning to organize, and then the RSMC named the system Dikeledi early on 9 January. Despite this, the JTWC held its TCFA, but still cited a consolidated low-level centre of circulation with deep flaring convection over the centre. By 11 January, the MFR reported that Dikeledi intensified into a tropical cyclone, with winds of . After slightly weakening, the cyclone made landfall near
Antsiranana,
Madagascar on 12 January. Afterward, Dikeledi weakened back to tropical storm status while over land, emerging into the Mozambique Channel near
Nosy-Be. While approaching the coast of Mozambique, the storm reattained tropical cyclone status on 13 January, making landfall in
Nampula Province shortly thereafter. Curving southward, the cyclone weakened to tropical storm status over land, but soon reemerged into the Mozambique Channel. Accelerating to the southeast, Dikeledi strengthened back to tropical cyclone intensity on 15 January, due to warm waters and favorable conditions. Passing southwest of southern Madagascar, it strengthened further into an intense tropical cyclone on 16 January, with peak sustained winds of 175 km/h (110 mph); Dikeledi broke the record for the most southerly cyclone of that intensity in the basin, surpassing that of
Cyclone Anggrek in 2024. Later that day, stronger wind shear caused the cyclone to rapidly weaken, and the storm transitioned into an extratropical cyclone on 17 January. ==Preparations==