Tide is currently rising — next high in 2h 03m

Next high tide at Marseille, Provence: 06:00 CEST, -0.48 m

Heights relative to MSL. 2026-04-27.

Coef. 90

Tide times at Marseille, Provence on Monday, 27 April 2026: first low tide at 02:00, first high tide at 06:00, second low tide at 13:00. Sunrise 06:39, sunset 20:34.

Tide curve — next 24 hours

-0.7 m-0.6 m-0.4 mHeight (MSL)06:0010:0014:0018:0022:0002:00H 06:00L 13:00nowTime (Europe/Paris)

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.
Mon 27 AprHigh06:00-0.5m90
Low13:00-0.7m
Thu 30 AprHigh20:00-0.5m
Fri 01 MayLow03:00-0.7m100
High08:00-0.5m
Low15:00-0.7m
High21:00-0.5m
Sat 02 MayLow04:00-0.7m62
High09:00-0.5m
Sun 03 MayLow04:00-0.6m95
High22:00-0.4m

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
06:39
Sunset
20:34
Moonrise
15:19
Moonset
04:18
Moon phase
Waxing gibbous (75% illuminated)

Current conditions

Wind
9.0 m/s @ 355°
Wave height
0.3 m
Wave period
3.9 s
Water temp
17.5 °C

As of 04:00 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
    ★★★★★

Best windows Mon 27 Apr

Suggested time slots at Marseille, Provence, derived from the tide, sun, moon, and conditions data on this page. Rough guidance, not a forecast.

About tides at Marseille, Provence

Marseille fronts the Mediterranean on France's southern coast, the country's oldest city and second-largest port, founded by Greek colonists from Phocaea in 600 BCE on the Vieux-Port that still anchors the modern town. The city wraps the working harbour with the limestone cliffs of the calanques running south-east toward Cassis, the Frioul archipelago and the Château d'If lying offshore, and the long urban beach corridor at the Prado running south-west toward L'Estaque and the Gulf of Fos beyond. The tide here is the small Mediterranean signal — mean range at the Marseille port gauge is about 0.2 metres, with spring tides reaching close to 0.4 metres and neaps dropping near flat. The astronomical signal is genuinely tiny because the Mediterranean is a nearly enclosed basin and the Atlantic tide cannot propagate cleanly through the narrow Strait of Gibraltar; the lunar forcing is the same everywhere on Earth but the Mediterranean has nothing to amplify it against. What matters far more on a day-to-day basis is meteorological tide — air pressure changes lift or drop sea level by a few centimetres on a calm day, and the mistral wind that funnels down the Rhône valley and out across the Gulf of Lion can shift water levels 30 to 50 centimetres in a matter of hours, sometimes building rapidly when the pressure gradient steepens overnight. The mistral is the defining seasonal force on this coast, capable of running 60-knot gusts for three days running and dropping coastal sea-surface temperatures by ten degrees on the offshore push that the wind generates. The calanques between Marseille and Cassis open up on the lowest predicted lows for the rocky-shore intertidal walks at Sormiou, Sugiton, En-Vau, and Morgiou, where the white-limestone cliffs drop directly into Mediterranean blue water and the swimming holes are reachable on foot at the bottom of the cycle. The sailing fleet out of the Vieux-Port and the modern Pointe Rouge marina, the working ferries to Corsica and the North African ports from the Marseille passenger terminal, the snorkellers in the Calanques National Park marine reserve, the night-fishing pointus around the Frioul archipelago, and the Pastis-and-pétanque waterfront culture along the Quai du Port and the Quai de Rive Neuve all read the wider weather pattern more than the tide table. Open-Meteo Marine drives the gridded predictions on this page; for authoritative French tide data, SHOM (Service Hydrographique et Océanographique de la Marine) publishes the official tide tables and operates the network of Mediterranean gauges including Marseille, Toulon, and Nice.

Common questions about tides at Marseille, Provence

When is the next high tide at Marseille?
The hero block shows the next high tide at the Marseille port gauge in local French time (CET in winter, CEST in summer, with DST). The 7-day table covers all daily highs and lows. The astronomical tide on this coast is small enough that wind and pressure changes routinely override the predicted signal.
What's the typical tide range at Marseille?
Mean range is about 0.2 metres at the port gauge — a tiny astronomical signal. Spring tides push close to 0.4 metres and neaps drop near flat. The Mediterranean is a nearly enclosed basin and the Atlantic tide cannot propagate cleanly through the Strait of Gibraltar, so the astronomical forcing has nothing meaningful to amplify against on this coast. Meteorological tide — wind and pressure — typically dominates day-to-day water-level variation.
Where do these tide predictions come from?
Open-Meteo Marine, a gridded global ocean model. Useful for planning the calanques walks, the Frioul archipelago crossings, the Vieux-Port sailing windows, and the Calanques National Park snorkel sessions. For authoritative French tide data, SHOM (Service Hydrographique et Océanographique de la Marine) publishes the official tide tables and operates the Marseille reference gauge alongside the Brittany Atlantic stations like Saint-Malo and Brest.
How does the mistral affect water levels at Marseille?
The mistral is a sustained northerly wind that funnels down the Rhône valley and out across the Gulf of Lion when high-pressure builds over central France and a low sits over the western Mediterranean. The wind regularly runs 30 to 50 knots and can hold for three to five days, pushing surface water offshore and dropping apparent sea level at the coast by 30 to 50 centimetres while the same offshore push drops coastal sea-surface temperatures by up to ten degrees through Ekman upwelling. The wind shifts the entire weather day around itself; sailors plan around its arrival and departure rather than around the astronomical tide.
Is this safe to use for navigation?
No. For piloting in or out of the Vieux-Port or the Marseille-Fos commercial harbour, transiting the Calanques coast, or working the Frioul approaches use the SHOM authoritative tide tables, the Marseille pilotage guidance, and the Préfecture maritime de la Méditerranée notices to mariners. Mistral conditions can change the day in hours and demand real-time forecasts.

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 2026-04-27T01:56:35.788Z. Predictions refresh daily.