TideTurtle
Satellite view of the coast near Port Isabel

Port Isabel tide times

Port Isabel tide forecast — heights relative to MSL.

26.07°N · 97.21°W
Updated Tue 2 Jun
Datum MSL
Tide rising
0.21m
Next high in 101h 10m
Next high
09:00
0.21 m · in 101h 10m
Next low
01:10
-0.18 m · in 117h 20m
Tide · next 12 h-0.18 m → 0.21 m
NOW · 03:49
Tide curve

Tide chart for Port Isabel

24-hour cosine-interpolated curve around the present moment. Heights relative to MSL. Predictions: Predictions: Open-Meteo Marine (MeteoFrance SMOC, 0.08° grid).

Tide MSL (m)
18:1323:0103:4908:3713:25NOW · 03:49
Today's conditions

Sun, moon and conditions on Tue 02 Jun

Snapshot at build time — refreshes daily. Sea state from Open-Meteo Marine.

Sunrise
06:36
Day -11h -20m
Sunset
20:16
Local America/Chicago
Moon
96%
Waning gibbous
Wind
10.4m/s
180° · s · strong
Swell
0.5m
4.7 s period
Water
29.1°
Sea surface temperature
7-day outlook

Highs and lows next 7 days

Every predicted high and low for the next week, with the daily tidal coefficient (0–120; higher = bigger swing, > 95 means stronger currents).

DayTypeTimeHeightCoef.
Fri 5 JunH09:000.21 m
Sat 6 JunL01:10-0.18 m
Sun 7 JunH09:100.09 m100
L16:10-0.10 m
Coastline

Other spots nearby

The three closest curated TideTurtle locations to Port Isabel, measured by great-circle distance.

Fishing & activity windows

Today's solunar windows

Solunar tradition: major periods are the ≈3h windows around moon transit and opposition; minor are ≈2h around moonrise and moonset. Pair with the local tide stage and wind for the best read.

Major (≈3h)
01:3004:30
13:5516:55
Minor (≈2h)
20:5022:50
07:1109:11
Editorial

About tides at Port Isabel

A short guide to the coastline at Port Isabel — geography, sea state, and what the tide is actually doing under your feet.

Port Isabel sits on the Texas coast of United States. The local tide pattern is moderate semidiurnal: from the gridded ocean model TideTurtle samples, the seven-day water-level range reaches about 0.7 m, with the bigger swings clustering around new and full moons.

For anyone visiting Port Isabel — surfers, anglers, paddlers, beach-walkers — the tide chart matters in two ways. First, the time of high or low water decides whether the shoreline is exposed or covered. Second, the rate of rise or fall sets how fast currents move in and out of any inlet, harbour or rivermouth nearby. The page below shows both: the next high and low tide times for today, and the seven-day forecast underneath.

Heights on this page are gridded predictions from the Open-Meteo Marine model, normalised to Mean Sea Level (MSL). They are accurate to within roughly 15-30 cm on most days; on storm-surge days the actual water can run higher than the prediction. For safety-critical planning consult official hydrographic services; for everyday surf, kayak, fishing and walking decisions the chart is enough.

Spring tides — the biggest swings of the lunar cycle — happen around new and full moons (twice a month). Neap tides — the smallest swings — land on the quarter moons. If you want the lowest low tide of the month for tidepooling or sandbar walking at Port Isabel, look at the seven-day chart for the spring tide.

Common questions

Tide questions about Port Isabel

Quick answers to the most common questions about tide times, range, and water access at Port Isabel.

When is the next high tide at Port Isabel?

The next high tide time at Port Isabel updates daily on this page from gridded Open-Meteo Marine predictions. Look at the highlighted next-high-tide chip at the top of the chart.

What is the tidal range at Port Isabel?

Over the next seven days the modelled water-level range at Port Isabel is about 0.7 m. Spring tides (around new and full moons) push the range above this average; neap tides (quarter moons) trim it.

Are these tide times accurate for navigation at Port Isabel?

Open-Meteo Marine is a gridded global model — accurate enough for everyday surf, fishing, paddling and walking decisions, but not a substitute for an official hydrographic chart. Consult united states's national authority before relying on it for safety-critical use.