Redondo Beach, WA
CATEGORY 2
WHAT
On February 14, tides will reach roughly 19.1 ft during the early morning high tide, with barometric pressure around 1013–1017 hPa. Based on historical comparisons and NOAA’s 0% flood likelihood, no flooding is expected.
WHEN
Primary high-tide periods occur near 04:36 AM and 02:06 PM PST, when water levels are highest.
IMPACTS
No significant flood impacts are expected. Low-lying roads, beach areas, and infrastructure should remain unaffected under these conditions.
• Barometric pressures are substantially higher than the historical low-pressure flooding events.
• The maximum predicted tide (~19.1 ft) remains below thresholds historically associated with flooding (above ~20–21 ft).
• NOAA’s Flood Likelihood for 2026-02-14 is 0.0%, aligning with no observed indications of flooding risk.
CATEGORY 2
WHAT
On February 15, the highest tide is near 19.3 ft in the early morning, but the barometric pressure is even higher (around 1025–1028 hPa). Consequently, no flood conditions are anticipated.
WHEN
Peak water levels are expected around 05:00 AM and again in the afternoon near 02:54 PM PST.
IMPACTS
No adverse flooding impacts. Coastal areas should remain unaffected by rising tides.
• Historical Category 4–5 floods involved much lower pressure and/or higher tides than currently forecast.
• NOAA’s Flood Likelihood remains at 0.0%, supporting a no-flood-risk assessment for this date.
CATEGORY 2
WHAT
On February 16, maximum tide levels may approach ~19.5 ft around the early morning tide (about 05:18 AM), with barometric pressure near 1018–1019 hPa. No flooding is expected.
WHEN
Highest tides likely to occur near 05:18 AM and 03:36 PM PST.
IMPACTS
No risk of flooding. Normal coastal activities and roads remain unaffected.
• While the morning tide is slightly higher than on previous days, the pressure remains well above the low-pressure threshold typically linked to coastal flooding.
• NOAA’s Flood Likelihood for this date is still 0.0%, indicating minimal concern for inundation threats.
You should monitor later forecasts and be alert for possible Flood Warnings. Those living in areas prone to flooding should be prepared to take action should flooding develop.
Categories 1-2: No risk of flooding.
Category 3: Close to a flood event and worth monitoring.
Category 4: Flooding is likely however, it is uncertain if this will cause major property damage.
Category 5: Likely to flood and cause property damage.
Categories 6-7: Extremely high risk of flooding and property damage.