The impacts related to natural disasters are influenced by population growth, increasing coastal settlement, and global climate change. Socially vulnerable groups, including pregnant women, may be disproportionately affected by hurricane-related health effects. The limited literature on this topic is comprised primarily of pre-post ecological studies that may have biases due to confounding. The results of current studies, although mixed, have suggested that adverse fetal outcomes, including preterm delivery, may increase with hurricanes exposure. We assessed hurricane exposure in 2004 with pregnancy outcomes using a cohort of Florida pregnancies constructed from 2003-2005 using vital statistics records. We first utilized a difference-in-differences modeling technique to assess the county-level association between hurricane exposure and birth rates. We then conducted an individual-level analysis using time-to-event modeling to investigate hazard rates of single and multiple hurricane exposures on preterm delivery stratified by race/ethnicity. In county-level analysis the difference-in-differences method consistently produced estimates that suggested no association between hurricane and live birth rate, while the results from generalized linear model sensitivity analysis were inconsistent across exposure methods. The consistency of the difference-in-differences method suggests potential ability to control for time-invariant confounders. In individual-level analysis we found evidence of association between hurricane exposure and increased hazard of extremely preterm delivery (