California
California's coastline runs from the Mexican border up past the Channel Islands and on to the Oregon line, and the tide signature changes more than the latitude suggests. Most of the coast reads mixed semidiurnal, two highs and two lows of unequal size each day, with the bigger swing falling on the lower-low water. San Diego sits inside a sheltered bay where the swing is calm and steady, around 1.7 metres at the harbour. North of Point Conception the open ocean pushes the range up and the timing back. The cleanest tidepool windows show up around new and full moons, when the lowest lows drop below MLLW and the inner shelf at Cabrillo or further up the coast at La Jolla opens for an hour or two either side. Surfers read the same tide table for a different reason: low water reshapes the breaks, and the change-of-tide rip is when the coast wakes up. Storm surge from a Pacific low can shift actual water level 10 to 20 cm above prediction in winter; the tables on this site assume calm.
California tide stations
- Ano Nuevo Island
- Arena Cove
- Avila
- Berkeley
- Bolinas Lagoon
- Cabrillo Beach
- Cape Mendocino
- Crescent City
- Eureka
- Fort Ross
- Gaviota
- Half Moon Bay (Pillar Point), CA
- Imperial Beach
- Los Angeles
- Monterey, CA
- Morro Bay
- Moss Landing
- Oakland
- Point Arguello
- Point Reyes
- Port Hueneme
- Port San Luis
- Rincon Island
- San Clemente
- San Diego, CA
- San Francisco, CA
- San Nicolas Island
- San Simeon
- Santa Barbara
- Santa Barbara Island
- Santa Cruz
- Santa Monica, CA
- Sausalito
- Shelter Cove
- Suisun Point
- Ventura
Tide times are guidance for planning, not navigation.