Tide is currently falling — next low at 03:00

Next high tide at Fremantle, Western Australia: 10:00 GMT+10, 0.62 m

Heights relative to MSL. 2026-04-27.

Tide times at Fremantle, Western Australia on Monday, 27 April 2026: first high tide at 11:00. Sunrise 08:45, sunset 19:44.

Tide curve — next 24 hours

0.2 m0.4 m0.7 mHeight (MSL)14:0018:0022:0002:0006:0010:00L 03:00nowTime (Australia/Sydney)

Predictions: Open-Meteo Marine (MeteoFrance SMOC, 0.08° grid) — heights relative to MSL (not chart datum / LAT). Model-derived.

Model-derived from a global ocean grid. Useful indication; expect about ±45 minutes on average vs. a local harmonic gauge, individual stations vary widely. See /methodology for per-region detail. Not for navigation.

7-day tide table

DayTypeTimeHeightCoef.
Tue 28 AprLow03:000.3m
Wed 29 AprHigh10:000.6m
Thu 30 AprLow03:000.3m83
High10:000.6m
Fri 01 MayLow01:000.3m100
High10:000.7m
Sat 02 MayLow21:00-0.0m

Predictions: Open-Meteo Marine (MeteoFrance SMOC, 0.08° grid) — heights relative to MSL (not chart datum / LAT). Model-derived. · Not for navigation.

Sun & moon today

Sunrise
08:45
Sunset
19:44
Moonrise
16:48
Moonset
04:21
Moon phase
Waxing gibbous (75% illuminated)

Current conditions

Wind
10.2 m/s @ 170°
Wave height
1.4 m
Wave period
14.0 s
Water temp
20.5 °C

As of 12:00 local time. Conditions refresh daily.

Solunar 7-day rating

The angler tradition that rates each day for fish-bite likelihood using moon transits and rise/set. One to five stars. Not a scientific forecast.

  • Mon
    ★★★★★
  • Tue
    ★★★★★
  • Wed
    ★★★★★
  • Thu
    ★★★★★
  • Fri
    ★★★★
  • Sat
    ★★★★
  • Sun
    ★★★★★

About tides at Fremantle, Western Australia

Fremantle sits at the mouth of the Swan River where it meets the Indian Ocean, the working port for Perth twenty kilometres upstream and the historical immigrant landing for Western Australia since the colony was founded in 1829. The Inner Harbour wraps the Swan River mouth between North Mole and South Mole, with Fishing Boat Harbour just to the south and Bathers Beach immediately west of the heritage town centre. The tide here is one of the smallest in Australia and one of the smallest open-ocean signals on Earth: mean range at the Fremantle harbour gauge is about 0.6 metres, with spring tides reaching close to 1.0 metres and neaps dropping near 0.2. The pattern is mixed semidiurnal but heavily diurnal-leaning at most lunar phases — many days produce a single clear high and a single clear low rather than two of each. The astronomical signal is small because the south-west Australian coast sits far from the major tidal nodes of the Indian Ocean and the local shelf and seabed geometry reflect rather than amplify the propagating wave. What matters more on a day-to-day basis is meteorological tide. The Fremantle Doctor — the steady south-west sea breeze that builds through the afternoon from November through April — pushes water against the coast and lifts apparent water level at the harbour by 20 to 40 centimetres on sustained event days, with the strongest events around midsummer reaching 50 centimetres or more. Tropical-low rainfall events from the north can drive the Swan River discharge through the harbour and force surface levels well above any astronomical reading. The defining seasonal events are the Rottnest Channel Swim and the Cottesloe surf. The Rottnest Channel Swim from Cottesloe Beach across 19.7 kilometres of open Indian Ocean to Rottnest Island has run every February since 1991 and draws thousands of solo and team swimmers — the day's tide window matters less than the wind and the swell. Cottesloe Beach immediately north of Fremantle hosts the Sculpture by the Sea exhibition every March and runs the local surf scene at Cottesloe Reef, North Cottesloe, and Mosman Park. The 1987 America's Cup defended at Fremantle on the Indian Ocean course off Rottnest is the only America's Cup ever sailed in southern hemisphere waters and the moment that turned the Western Australian sailing industry into a global force. Fishing Boat Harbour fish-and-chip culture, the Maritime Museum at Victoria Quay, the Fremantle Markets in the heritage town centre, the Cappuccino Strip espresso scene, and the working container terminal at North Quay all read different parts of the calendar. The Australian Bureau of Meteorology and the Department of Transport WA publish the authoritative tide tables; Open-Meteo Marine drives the gridded predictions on this page.

Common questions about tides at Fremantle, Western Australia

When is the next high tide at Fremantle?
The hero block shows the next high tide at the Fremantle harbour gauge in local Western Australian time (AWST, UTC+8, no DST). The 7-day table covers all daily highs and lows. The diurnal-leaning pattern means many days produce a single clear high and a single clear low rather than two of each, and the Fremantle Doctor sea-breeze can shift apparent water level more than the astronomical signal at most lunar phases.
What's the typical tide range at Fremantle?
Mean range at the Fremantle harbour gauge is about 0.6 metres — one of the smallest open-ocean tide signals on Earth. Spring tides push close to 1.0 metres and neaps drop near 0.2. The pattern is mixed semidiurnal but heavily diurnal-leaning at most lunar phases. The Fremantle Doctor sea-breeze in summer matters more than the lunar phase for working day-to-day water-level variation.
Where do these tide predictions come from?
Open-Meteo Marine, a gridded global ocean model. Useful for planning Cottesloe and Bathers Beach swimming windows, Rottnest ferry crossings, Fishing Boat Harbour photography sessions, and the Swan River mouth crossings. For authoritative Western Australian tide data, the Australian Bureau of Meteorology and the Department of Transport WA publish the official tide tables and operate the Fremantle reference gauge.
What's the Cottesloe and Rottnest swim culture?
The Rottnest Channel Swim from Cottesloe Beach across 19.7 kilometres of open Indian Ocean to Rottnest Island has run every February since 1991 and draws thousands of solo and team swimmers — the largest open-water swim event in the southern hemisphere. The day's tide window matters less than the wind direction and the swell forecast. Cottesloe Beach hosts the Sculpture by the Sea exhibition every March and runs the local surf scene at Cottesloe Reef, North Cottesloe, and Mosman Park. Indian Ocean swell from the Roaring Forties south of Australia drives the bigger surf days; the Fremantle Doctor cleans up the same coast in summer afternoons.
Is this safe to use for navigation?
No. For piloting in or out of the Fremantle harbour, transiting the Rottnest Channel, or any Indian Ocean approach use the Australian Bureau of Meteorology authoritative tide tables, the Fremantle Ports pilotage guidance, and the Bureau of Meteorology tropical-cyclone warnings during the November-to-April season. The astronomical signal is small enough that meteorological forcing dominates day-to-day water-level variation.

Read about how these predictions are made on the methodology page. Unfamiliar with terms like spring tide or datum? See the glossary.

Not for navigation. Page generated 2026-04-27T01:56:36.222Z. Predictions refresh daily.