Tide is currently falling — next low at 19:00

Next high tide at Cape Town, Western Cape: 01:00 GMT+2, 0.16 m

Heights relative to MSL. 2026-04-27.

Coef. 60

Tide times at Cape Town, Western Cape on Monday, 27 April 2026: first high tide at 02:00, first low tide at 19:00. Sunrise 07:17, sunset 18:10.

Tide curve — next 24 hours

-1.2 m-0.4 m0.3 mHeight (MSL)06:0010:0014:0018:0022:0002:00L 19:00H 01:00nowTime (Africa/Johannesburg)

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 AprLow19:00-0.9m64
Tue 28 AprHigh01:000.2m88
Low07:00-1.0m
High13:000.0m
Low19:00-1.0m
Wed 29 AprHigh01:000.1m93
Low08:00-1.1m
High14:000.1m
Low20:00-1.0m
Thu 30 AprHigh02:000.3m96
Low08:00-1.0m
High14:000.3m
Low20:00-0.9m
Fri 01 MayHigh02:000.4m100
Low09:00-1.0m
High15:000.3m
Low21:00-0.9m
Sat 02 MayHigh03:000.3m96
Low09:00-1.0m
High15:000.3m
Low21:00-0.9m
Sun 03 MayHigh03:000.3m82
Low22:00-0.8m

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
07:17
Sunset
18:10
Moonrise
15:27
Moonset
02:03
Moon phase
Waxing gibbous (75% illuminated)

Current conditions

Wind
8.0 m/s @ 208°
Wave height
3.5 m
Wave period
9.7 s
Water temp
16.9 °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 Cape Town, Western Cape, derived from the tide, sun, moon, and conditions data on this page. Rough guidance, not a forecast.

Spring & neap tides at Cape Town, Western Cape

Next spring tide on Fri 01 May (range 1.4m). Last neap on Mon 27 Apr. Next neap on Sun 03 May.

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 Cape Town, Western Cape

Cape Town sits on the Atlantic-facing shore of the Cape Peninsula at the south-western tip of Africa, with Table Mountain at its back, the V&A Waterfront harbour at its feet, and Cape Point an hour south down the peninsula where the cold Benguela current up the Atlantic side brushes past the warm Agulhas current sweeping down the Indian Ocean side. The textbook two-oceans meeting line is at Cape Agulhas a hundred and fifty kilometres east, but the temperature contrast between Camps Bay on the Atlantic and Muizenberg on False Bay can run ten degrees on the same afternoon. The tide here is a moderate semidiurnal signal — two highs and two lows of comparable size each day, twelve and a half hours apart — with a mean range at the harbour gauge of about 1.4 metres, climbing past 1.8 metres on the largest spring tides and dropping near 0.9 on neaps. The defining wind is the Cape Doctor, a south-easter that sweeps down off Table Mountain through the summer, scours the city clean of pollution, and pushes the surface water offshore on the Atlantic side, dropping inshore sea-surface temperatures into single digits even in February. The Two Oceans Aquarium at the V&A Waterfront runs a tidal-pool exhibit that exchanges water with the harbour each cycle and is one of the better introductions to the local intertidal you will find in any city aquarium. Surf at Muizenberg, kelp-forest dives off Cape Point, kayak crossings to the Robben Island heritage site, the rock pools at St James and Kalk Bay, the long sand at Noordhoek and Long Beach Kommetjie, and the protected swimming at Clifton's four beaches all read the table for different windows. Open-Meteo Marine drives the gridded predictions on this page; for authoritative South African tide data, the South African Navy Hydrographic Office (SANHO) publishes the official tide tables and operates the Cape Town reference gauge.

Common questions about tides at Cape Town, Western Cape

When is the next high tide at Cape Town?
The hero block at the top of this page shows the next high tide at the Cape Town harbour gauge in local South African Standard Time (UTC+2, no DST). The 7-day table covers all the highs and lows. High water at Hout Bay south of the city arrives a few minutes ahead of the inner-harbour gauge; at Simon's Town on the False Bay side it lags by about twenty minutes.
What's the typical tide range at Cape Town?
Mean range at the harbour gauge is about 1.4 metres, climbing past 1.8 metres on spring tides around new and full moons and dropping near 0.9 metres on neaps. The pattern is cleanly semidiurnal — two highs and two lows of comparable size each day, twelve and a half hours apart — and is well-resolved by harmonic prediction under normal weather.
Where do these tide predictions come from?
Open-Meteo Marine, a gridded global ocean model. Useful for daily planning around the V&A Waterfront, the Atlantic-side beaches, and the False Bay coast. For authoritative South African tide data, the South African Navy Hydrographic Office (SANHO) publishes the official tide tables and operates the Cape Town reference gauge.
How does the Cape Doctor wind affect the tide?
It does not affect the astronomical tide directly, but the Cape Doctor — the south-easterly that sweeps down off Table Mountain through summer — pushes surface water offshore on the Atlantic side and can lower apparent water level by 10 to 20 cm at the city beaches while it blows. The same wind drops inshore sea-surface temperatures by several degrees through Ekman transport. Surfers and cold-water swimmers read the wind forecast as much as the tide table.
Is this safe to use for navigation?
No. For piloting in or out of Cape Town harbour, transiting the Cape Point waters, or working the open False Bay coast, use the South African Navy Hydrographic Office authoritative tide tables, the Transnet National Ports Authority pilotage guidance, and the South African Maritime Safety Authority's notices to mariners. The Cape of Good Hope south of the peninsula is one of the working hazards of South Atlantic shipping and the rip currents off the Atlantic-facing beaches at Llandudno are working-hazardous in any state of tide.

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 2026-04-27T01:56:35.276Z. Predictions refresh daily.