The name Marie has been used for fourteen tropical cyclones in the eastern and western Pacific Ocean tropical cyclone basins.
In the Eastern Pacific:
- Hurricane Marie (1984), a Category 1 hurricane that stayed offshore Baja California in early September
- Hurricane Marie (1990), a Category 4 hurricane that had no effects on land; briefly threatened the Hawaiian islands
- Hurricane Marie (2008), a Category 1 hurricane that had no effects on land
- Hurricane Marie (2014), a rare Category 5 hurricane that produced some flooding in coastal Mexico while producing large swells that caused damage and multiple deaths along Baja California and Southern California
- Hurricane Marie (2020), a Category 4 hurricane that had no effects on land
In the Western Pacific:
- Typhoon Marie (1954) (T5415), a relatively weak typhoon which nonetheless devastated Japan and killed 1,361 people; also sank the Tōya Maru, hence becoming known as the Toyamaru Typhoon
- Typhoon Marie (1958) (T5827), a strong typhoon that had no effects on land
- Tropical Storm Marie (1961) (T6117, 49W), made landfall in Shikoku as a tropical depression
- Typhoon Marie (1964) (T6416, 20W, Undang), an erratic system which meandered in the Ryukyu Islands
- Typhoon Marie (1966) (T6631, 33W), another strong typhoon that stayed at sea
- Tropical Storm Marie (1969) (T6919, 23W), the final storm of the 1969 season; did not affect land areas
- Typhoon Marie (1972) (T7224, 26W), which destroyed many crops and coconut palms in the Northern Mariana Islands
- Typhoon Marie (1976) (T7603, 03W, Konsing), a strong early-season typhoon which did not affect land
- Typhoon Marie (1997) (T9705, 06W), a typhoon which formed in the Northern Mariana Islands but ultimately did not impact any major landmass