Tide is currently falling — next low at 13:00

Next high tide at Palma de Mallorca: 20:00 CEST, -0.45 m

Heights relative to MSL. 2026-04-27.

Tide times at Palma de Mallorca on Monday, 27 April 2026: first low tide at 13:00. Sunrise 06:56, sunset 20:38.

Tide curve — next 24 hours

-0.6 m-0.5 m-0.4 mHeight (MSL)06:0010:0014:0018:0022:0002:00L 13:00nowTime (Europe/Madrid)

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 AprLow13:00-0.6m
Tue 28 AprHigh20:00-0.5m

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
06:56
Sunset
20:38
Moonrise
15:35
Moonset
04:23
Moon phase
Waxing gibbous (75% illuminated)

Current conditions

Wind
5.4 m/s @ 360°
Wave height
0.3 m
Wave period
4.2 s
Water temp
18.1 °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 Palma de Mallorca, derived from the tide, sun, moon, and conditions data on this page. Rough guidance, not a forecast.

About tides at Palma de Mallorca

Palma sits at the head of the Bay of Palma on the south-west coast of Mallorca, the largest of the Balearic Islands. The tide here is the small Mediterranean signal that the rest of the western Med shares: mean range at the harbour is about 0.2 metres, with spring tides barely topping 0.3 metres and neaps closer to 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. What this coast actually responds to 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 a strong tramontana wind from the north or a sirocco from the south can shift water level 20 to 30 cm in a matter of hours. The phenomenon known locally as a rissaga — a Mediterranean meteotsunami driven by atmospheric pressure waves — produces sudden water-level changes in harbours that face open water at the right angle. Ciutadella on Menorca's western coast is the most famous rissaga harbour, but the bays around Mallorca see the same effect at smaller amplitude. Sailors timing harbour exits at Palma's marinas, paddleboarders launching from Cala Major, and snorkellers at Cala Llombards or Es Trenc all read the wider weather pattern more than the tide table. Open-Meteo Marine drives the gridded predictions on this page; Puertos del Estado runs the authoritative Mediterranean gauge network.

Common questions about tides at Palma de Mallorca

When is the next high tide at Palma?
The hero block shows the next high tide at Palma harbour in local Madrid time (CET in winter, CEST in summer). The 7-day table covers daily extremes — though for the Mediterranean the swing is small enough that the difference between high and low can be near the resolution of the gridded model on quiet days.
Why is the tide so small in the Mediterranean?
The Mediterranean is a nearly enclosed sea connected to the Atlantic only through the narrow Strait of Gibraltar. The Atlantic semidiurnal tide cannot propagate cleanly through the strait, and the basin is too small to host its own significant astronomical tide. Mean range across most of the western Med — Mallorca, the Spanish mainland, Sardinia, Corsica — is 0.2 to 0.3 metres. The eastern basin is similarly small.
What is a rissaga?
A rissaga (Catalan; rissagas in Spanish) is a Mediterranean meteotsunami — a sudden sea-level oscillation in a harbour driven by atmospheric pressure waves coupling with the basin's natural resonance. Ciutadella on Menorca is the most famous case, where surges of 1 to 2 metres can hit in minutes. Mallorcan harbours see smaller versions; the underlying physics is the same. They are not predictable from the tide table — rissaga forecasts come from the Spanish meteorological agency AEMET when conditions look right.
Where do these tide predictions come from?
Open-Meteo Marine, a gridded global ocean model. Useful for general planning around the bay and the marinas, though for the small Mediterranean signal the gridded resolution sometimes shows more noise than swing. For authoritative Spanish tide data, Puertos del Estado runs the official Mediterranean gauge network including Palma and Ibiza.
Is this safe to use for navigation?
No. For piloting in or out of Palma's harbours, transiting the bay, or working the calas use Puertos del Estado's authoritative tide tables, the Instituto Hidrográfico de la Marina chart products, and the latest Spanish coastguard notices. Rissaga events override normal tidal predictions and the local Capitanía Marítima publishes specific guidance when conditions look right.

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 2026-04-27T01:56:34.718Z. Predictions refresh daily.