Subtropical Storm Beryl has formed in the Atlantic off the coast of South Carolina.

The second named storm of the Atlantic Hurricane Season, Beryl became a weak subtropical storm with sustained winds at 45 mph Friday night.

According to Bay News 9 Meteorologist Brian McClure, Beryl has stalled roughly 305 miles off the coast of Charleston, S.C.

"The system will likely move back toward the Georgia coast and could have an impact on the Bay area's weather through the Memorial Day weekend," McClure said.

Unlike most storms, the exact track and intensity of Beryl won’t make a big difference for the Bay area. The main impact for us will be for atmospheric moisture to increase.

"We can expect scattered storms to increase Sunday evening with even higher rain chances for Memorial Day. The farther south and west Beryl moves, the higher our rain chance will be," McClure said.

Get the latest forecast every 10 minutes with Weather on the Nines.

From Sunday evening through Tuesday, the system could bring beneficial rain to the region. There will be a breeze from the northeast on Saturday, an increasing northwest breeze on Sunday and then an onshore west wind on Memorial Day.

As a result of the rain and cloud cover, temperatures will be lower through the Memorial Day weekend than we've seen with record highs to end the week.

Tropical storm warnings are out for the Volusia-Brevard County line to Edisto Beach, S.C. A watch is out for most of the South Carolina coast.

Beryl is more about rain, less about severe weather

"Tropical storms this early in the season tend to be small and aren’t necessarily bad," McClure said. "Historically these storms tend be drought busters and provide very beneficial rains to areas across the southeast."