Tide is currently rising — next high at 17:30

Next high tide at Chennai (Marina), Tamil Nadu: 17:30 GMT+5:30, 0.86 m

Heights relative to MSL. 2026-04-27.

Coef. 80

Tide times at Chennai (Marina), Tamil Nadu on Monday, 27 April 2026: first high tide at 17:30, first low tide at 23:30. Sunrise 05:50, sunset 18:23.

Tide curve — next 24 hours

0.0 m0.5 m0.9 mHeight (MSL)09:3013:3017:3021:3001:3005:30H 17:30L 23:30H 05:30nowTime (Asia/Kolkata)

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 AprHigh17:300.9m79
Low23:300.1m
Tue 28 AprHigh05:300.8m69
Low11:300.2m
High17:300.9m
Wed 29 AprLow00:300.1m84
High06:300.9m
Low12:300.2m
High18:300.8m
Thu 30 AprLow00:300.0m91
High07:300.9m
Low13:300.1m
High18:300.8m
Fri 01 MayLow01:30-0.0m98
High07:300.9m
Low13:300.1m
High19:300.8m
Sat 02 MayLow01:30-0.0m100
High08:300.9m
Low14:300.1m
High20:300.8m
Sun 03 MayLow02:30-0.0m98
High08:300.9m
Low14:300.1m
High20:300.7m

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
05:50
Sunset
18:23
Moonrise
14:06
Moonset
02:44
Moon phase
Waxing gibbous (75% illuminated)

Current conditions

Wind
14.9 m/s @ 201°
Wave height
0.8 m
Wave period
7.7 s
Water temp
30.4 °C

As of 07:30 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 Chennai (Marina), Tamil Nadu, derived from the tide, sun, moon, and conditions data on this page. Rough guidance, not a forecast.

Spring & neap tides at Chennai (Marina), Tamil Nadu

Next spring tide on Sat 02 May (range 1.0m). Last neap on Mon 27 Apr.

Spring tides cluster around new and full moons (biggest swings). Neap tides land on quarter moons (smallest swings). See the spring tide and neap tide glossary entries for the why.

About tides at Chennai (Marina), Tamil Nadu

Chennai fronts the western Bay of Bengal on India's south-eastern coast, with the Marina Beach reference shoreline running 13 kilometres from the Cooum river mouth at Triplicane south past the Chepauk cricket ground, the Madras Lighthouse, and the Foreshore Estate to the Adyar river estuary at Besant Nagar. Marina is the second-longest urban beach in the world after Cox's Bazar across the bay in Bangladesh, and the wide sand widens by tens of metres at low water. The tide here is a moderate mixed semidiurnal signal — two highs and two lows of unequal size most days, the asymmetry varying through the lunar month — with a smaller range than the Arabian Sea side at Mumbai. Mean range at the Chennai harbour gauge is about 1.0 metre, climbing past 1.5 metres on spring tides and dropping near 0.5 on neaps. The defining hazard is the cyclone season — the post-monsoon period from October through December produces several Bay of Bengal cyclones each year, and storm surge during landfall can stack two to four metres above predicted; Cyclone Vardah (2016), Gaja (2018), and Mandous (2022) each caused significant coastal damage to the Tamil Nadu shoreline. The 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, which hit Marina Beach as a separate non-tidal event, killed thousands along this coastline and remains the largest natural disaster in the city's modern history. Mahabalipuram south of Chennai has the Pancha Rathas and the Shore Temple sitting on the immediate beachfront, and the lowest spring lows briefly expose submerged sculpture remnants offshore that locals identify with the lost city of the Seven Pagodas. Marina fishing fleets at Royapuram, the working container terminal at Ennore, the long sand at Besant Nagar, and the surf breaks at Kovalam south of the city all read the table for different windows. Open-Meteo Marine drives the gridded predictions on this page; for authoritative Indian tide data, the Survey of India and the Indian National Centre for Ocean Information Services (INCOIS) publish the official tide tables.

Common questions about tides at Chennai (Marina), Tamil Nadu

When is the next high tide at Chennai?
The hero block shows the next high tide at the Chennai harbour gauge in local Indian Standard Time (UTC+5:30, no DST). The 7-day table covers all the highs and lows. High water at Pulicat Lake to the north arrives a few minutes ahead of the harbour gauge; at Mahabalipuram south of the city it lags by about ten minutes.
What's the typical tide range at Chennai?
Mean range at the harbour gauge is about 1.0 metre, climbing past 1.5 metres on spring tides around new and full moons and dropping near 0.5 metres on neaps. The pattern is mixed semidiurnal — two highs and two lows of unequal size each day — and the range is smaller than the Arabian Sea side at Mumbai because the Bay of Bengal is broader and the continental shelf wider on the Indian east coast.
Where do these tide predictions come from?
Open-Meteo Marine, a gridded global ocean model. Useful for daily planning around Marina Beach, the working harbour, and the Mahabalipuram heritage shoreline south of the city. For authoritative Indian tide data, the Survey of India and INCOIS publish the official tide tables and operate the Chennai reference gauge.
How dangerous is the cyclone season for the Chennai coast?
The post-monsoon cyclone season from October through December produces several Bay of Bengal cyclones each year, and storm surge during landfall can stack two to four metres above predicted water levels. Cyclone Vardah (2016), Gaja (2018), and Mandous (2022) each caused significant coastal damage. The harmonic predictions on this page assume normal weather; for cyclone-season surge threats, the India Meteorological Department's regional cyclone warning centre at Chennai is the authoritative real-time source.
Is this safe to use for navigation?
No. For piloting in or out of Chennai harbour, transiting the Ennore approaches, or working the open Bay of Bengal coast use the Survey of India authoritative tide tables, the Chennai Port Trust pilotage guidance, and the Indian Coast Guard notices to mariners. Marina Beach has strong rip currents under any monsoon-season swell and is not a safe swimming beach despite its width and sand quality.

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 2026-04-27T01:56:35.372Z. Predictions refresh daily.