This study investigates the mechanical and thermodynamic effects of the evaporating ocean spray on the structure and dynamics of a hurricane marine atmospheric boundary layer using Eulerian multifluid and mixture model approaches coupled with the E−ϵ turbulence closure. The multifluid framework treats air and spray as interpenetrating phases, enabling a physically consistent representation of air–droplet interactions governing momentum transfer, enthalpy exchange, and turbulence modulation. The mixture approach is based on a simplified description that captures only part of the underlying physics, yet offers an advantage in its ability to yield analytical insight. Mechanically, spray produces competing effects: on one hand, droplet inertia causes wind deceleration, on the other, the spray-induced turbulence attenuation, primarily resulting from the air–droplet friction, leads to strengthening the wind. Analytical and numerical results show that the latter effect prevails for typical spray droplet sizes leading to wind acceleration and drag reduction at hurricane wind speeds. Thermodynamically, evaporating droplets redistribute total heat flux in favor of its latent component, with effects strongly dependent on the droplet size. Small droplets suppress turbulence and reduce the total enthalpy flux, whereas large ones enhance it. Furthermore, spray significantly increases the total enthalpy-to-drag coefficient ratio with wind speed, which agrees with field observations.