








National Weather Service Forecast for: Orlando, Florida Forecast Details
098
FXUS62 KMLB 081903
AFDMLB
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Melbourne FL
303 PM EDT Wed Apr 8 2026
...New KEY MESSAGES, DISCUSSION, MARINE...
.KEY MESSAGES...
Issued at 255 PM EDT Wed Apr 8 2026
- Flood Watch remains in effect through 10 PM for coastal
counties. The highest potential for flooding exists along the
Treasure Coast where 2 to 4 inches of rain is likely, with
locally higher amounts of 6".
- Wind gusts of 30 to 40 mph will continue through late evening
inland and into early Thursday morning along the coast. A Wind
Advisory remains in effect. Breezy conditions are forecast
through late week.
- Dangerous beach and boating conditions persist, including the
risk for numerous life-threatening rip currents and rough surf.
Minor beach erosion during times of high tide is possible.
- Drier conditions gradually return Friday into the weekend as a
warming trend begins
&&
.DISCUSSION...
Issued at 255 PM EDT Wed Apr 8 2026
Now-Tonight...Early this afternoon, a surface trough is sitting over
the east central Florida coast. This feature, along with saturated
easterly flow, is supporting scattered onshore-moving showers. A few
lightning strikes have also been observed in the last hour or two,
just offshore over the Atlantic waters. Forecast soundings and hi-
res model guidance suggest deeper moisture convergence this
afternoon, generally from southern Brevard and central Osceola
counties southward. Run-to-run signals of some locally higher
rainfall totals of 2-4" (locally 6") continue, especially focused on
the Treasure Coast. A Slight Risk of Excessive Rainfall exists in
these areas, highlighting the coast from Melbourne southward.
Instances of localized flooding are possible, especially in low-
lying areas and in locations that have received heavy rain over the
last 48+ hours. While the signal for heavier rainfall is lower to
the north, have decided to let the Flood Watch continue for all
coastal counties through 10 PM (including Volusia).
In addition to the rain is the strong wind. More sites are beginning
to gust 35+ mph this afternoon, especially over the northern two-
thirds of the area, as the pressure gradient tightens. 925mb winds
are forecast to strengthen up to 35-40 kt through the evening,
increasing the potential for 35-45 mph gusts. A Wind Advisory
remains in effect for most of the area, with Okeechobee County
joining in the advisory at 4 PM. For now, the advisory is set to
expire by 5 AM Thursday, but this conditions will be evaluated for
any updates through the evening.
Beach conditions will remain dangerous this afternoon into tonight.
Buoy 41114 has been reporting 8 to 9-foot seas with a long period of
11 seconds. This makes for a rough and dangerous surf zone, which is
why the High Surf Advisory and High Risk of Rip Currents continues
into Thursday.
Thursday-Friday...The H5 trough axis slides east on Thursday,
gradually lessening overall support for shower activity. That said,
Thursday still looks soggy with scattered showers around through mid
afternoon. CAMs suggest 1-2" of additional rainfall is possible in
the more organized showers (cannot rule out an isolated storm).
Later in the day and into the evening, drier air starts to work
south and cut into shower development (especially after sunset).
While not quite as windy, coupled onshore winds will support gusts
of 30-35 mph on Thursday, especially at the immediate coast.
Conditions at the beaches will remain dangerous, so staying out of
the water is highly encouraged!
Drier air helps to clear skies out a bit on Friday, which allows the
upcoming warming trend to commence. Comfortably mild highs in the
upper 70s to low 80s are forecast as a very low chance for a shower
remains from Sebastian south to Lake Okeechobee and the Treasure
Coast. Otherwise, dry weather starts to take over with high pressure
building over the eastern U.S. Surf conditions will still remain
dangerous with a high risk of rip currents lingering at area beaches.
Saturday-Wednesday...Increasingly dry and warm conditions take over
this weekend, and especially next week, as an H5 ridge axis builds
overhead. For perspective, normal high temperatures for mid-April
are generally in the low 80s. Saturday`s forecast highs place us
slightly below normal before the low 80s return everywhere Sunday
and Monday. Interior locations warm up the most through the middle
of next week, reaching the mid to upper 80s by Wednesday. Onshore
flow will continue with surface high pressure situated well north
and east of us. The pressure gradient weakens from Tuesday onward,
so occasional gusts around 20 mph from the sea breeze will about do
it for peak winds each afternoon. Don`t be caught off guard by a
return to more inviting weather at the beaches! Wave heights begin
to decrease late this weekend into the first part of next week, but
a lingering long period swell will prolong the moderate to high risk
for rip currents.
&&
.MARINE...
Issued at 255 PM EDT Wed Apr 8 2026
Dangerous marine conditions are ongoing this afternoon with Buoys
41114 and 41009 reporting wave heights of 9 feet and 14 feet,
respectively. A tight pressure gradient is supporting east-northeast
winds of 25+ knots with frequent gusts near or just below gale
force. A Gale Warning remains in place for all legs of the local
Atlantic until 2 AM Thursday, followed by a Small Craft Advisory
thereafter. Rough seas will persist Thursday as winds slacken only
slightly, sustained 20-27 kt and gusting up to 30 kt at times. Seas
9-14 ft.
From Friday onward, fresh to strong onshore breezes will
continue as the high anchors over the Appalachians. This will
prolong poor to hazardous boating conditions through much of the
weekend. Seas decrease to 6-9 ft Friday afternoon, remaining 5-8
ft through Sunday.
&&
.AVIATION...
(18Z TAFs)
Issued at 121 PM EDT Wed Apr 8 2026
Tight pressure gradient continues over the area with the former
front to the south and strong high pressure to the north building in
across the Eastern Seaboard. Breezy/Windy/Gusty conditions will
exist areawide. NERLY winds 15-25 kts with gusts 25-35 kts, perhaps
40 kts at times along the immediate coast. Conditions remain
breezy/gusty into tonight 10-20 kts with higher gusts - highest
values along the coast. Fairly quick, onshore-moving rain showers
continue with models suggesting greatest concentrations later
today across south Brevard and the Treasure Coast. ISOLD lighting
storms possible here too. We continue to see a mix of VFR/MVFR
with localized IFR CIGs, esp in passing showers. Prevailing
showers and TEMPO groups inclusive as confidence allows.
&&
.PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS...
DAB 65 75 64 78 / 50 50 10 10
MCO 66 74 64 78 / 50 60 10 10
MLB 67 76 67 78 / 60 70 30 10
VRB 66 77 66 78 / 70 60 30 20
LEE 64 77 61 81 / 30 50 10 0
SFB 64 77 63 80 / 50 60 10 10
ORL 65 76 63 80 / 50 60 10 10
FPR 66 77 65 78 / 70 60 40 20
&&
.MLB WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
FL...Flood Watch until 10 PM EDT this evening for FLZ041-141-154-159-
164-247-254-259-264-347-447-547-647-747.
Wind Advisory until 5 AM EDT Thursday for FLZ041-141-154-159-164-
247-254-259-264-347-447-547-647-747.
Wind Advisory until midnight EDT tonight for FLZ044>046-053-144.
Wind Advisory until midnight EDT tonight for FLZ058.
High Surf Advisory until 8 PM EDT Thursday for FLZ141-154-159-
164-347-447-647-747.
AM...Gale Warning until 2 AM EDT Thursday for AMZ550-552-555-570-572-
575.
Small Craft Advisory from 2 AM Thursday to 8 PM EDT Friday for
AMZ550-552-555-570-572-575.
&&
$$
DISCUSSION...Schaper
AVIATION...Sedlock
National Weather Service Forecast for: Miami, Florida
| This Afternoon ![]() T-storms Likely |
Tonight![]() T-storms |
Thursday![]() Heavy Rain |
Thursday Night ![]() Chance Showers and Breezy |
Friday![]() Breezy. Chance Showers then Chance T-storms |
| Hi 78 °F | Lo 72 °F | Hi 77 °F | Lo 73 °F | Hi 78 °F |
National Weather Service Forecast for: Miami, Florida Forecast Details
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