








National Weather Service Forecast for: Orlando, Florida Forecast Details
056
FXUS62 KMLB 061811
AFDMLB
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Melbourne FL
211 PM EDT Mon Apr 6 2026
...New AVIATION...
.KEY MESSAGES...
Issued at 231 AM EDT Mon Apr 6 2026
- Excessive Rain Threat This Week: Multiple rounds of rain and
storms are expected through Thursday, especially along the
coast where totals of 2-4" are forecast. Localized higher
amounts may lead to flash flooding in urban and poorly-drained
areas.
- Strong Wind Gusts Beginning Tuesday: Persistent northeast winds
will gust from 25-35 mph starting Tuesday. There is a 20-40%
chance of peak wind gusts exceeding 45 mph on Tuesday and
Wednesday. These winds may cause a few power outages; secure
all lightweight outdoor items.
- Dangerous Surf & Boating Impacts: Large breaking waves building
to 8-12 feet at Central Florida`s Atlantic beaches Tuesday
through Thursday, with higher waves offshore. Expect minor to
moderate beach erosion around high tide and numerous life-
threatening rip currents. Entering the ocean is strongly
discouraged this week.
&&
.DISCUSSION...
Issued at 231 AM EDT Mon Apr 6 2026
-----------Synoptic Overview-----------
During the work week, the pattern evolution favors multiple weather
hazards affecting Central Florida. Early this morning, a broad
mid-level trough over the Northeast U.S. has sent a cold front into
the Deep South. Above-normal total moisture exists ahead of the
boundary, with a ribbon of PWs exceeding 175% of normal situated
over the Florida Panhandle. Strong continental high pressure is
nudging into the Northern Plains behind a clipper-type disturbance.
Split flow is evident across the West; a branch of the subtropical
jet is currently entering the Rio Grande Valley.
The 05/12Z grand ensemble is in relatively good agreement with the
interplay of these features over Florida during the next 24-48
hours. The cold front is projected to decelerate as it enters
the Florida peninsula early this week, leaving plentiful moisture
over the southern two-thirds of the state. This will occur as the
1035+ mb high migrates into the Eastern Great Lakes by late Tuesday.
Synoptic ascent will increase as the subtropical jet streak ejects
into the Gulf, placing Florida in its left-front quadrant beginning
Tuesday. At the same time, the state will feel diffluence from
the right-rear quadrant of the polar jet stream along the Eastern
Seaboard. Consequently, most of the global guidance sharpens the
surface trough over Central FL on Tuesday. A mesoscale low could
also form on the boundary. This will substantially tighten the
pressure and height gradients, with some members increasing
northeasterly 3 kft (H925) winds to over 50 kt late Tuesday. These
values hold at 30-40 kt through at least Wednesday night.
By Thursday, a secondary disturbance in the subtropical jet may
pass overhead. The surface trough is forecast to settle into the
Florida Straits, with brisk onshore flow persisting. Anomalous
moisture should remain in place, interacting with frictional
convergence along the coast, particularly at night/early morning.
As ridging begins to overtake the Eastern U.S., this unsettled
weather pattern is then expected to loosen its grip on Florida late
in the week. About 60% of members prefer a quicker transition out
of this pattern starting on Friday, with the remainder showing
a lingering weakness at H5 through Saturday. There is strong
agreement that the H5 ridge will assert itself over Florida late
in the weekend, allowing a warming and drying trend to commence.
-------Sensible Weather & Impacts-------
Through Thursday...
Excessive Rainfall Impact:
Unsettled weather gets underway today as a cold front settles into
the northern half of the district. After a mainly quiet morning,
showers and storms should develop after lunchtime on the east
coast sea breeze. At the same time, hi-res guidance continues
to develop convection near the stalled front along the I-4
corridor, persisting until the sea breeze collision occurs south
of Orlando. Proximity soundings show an uncapped troposphere with
sufficient instability and relatively slow storm motions. Much
of the area is in a Marginal excessive rainfall risk, and the WPC
Urban Rain Rate Dashboard for Greater Orlando shows a 40% chance
of 3"+ of rain falling somewhere in the metro area this afternoon
and evening. Southwesterly mid-level flow may steer these storms
back toward the east coast late in the evening.
Along the coast starting Monday night and into Tuesday, jet
dynamics become increasingly favorable for heavy rain and localized
flooding. Early-arriving convective guidance depicts this quite
well, with slow-moving rain bands developing near the stalled
surface trough axis somewhere between St Augustine and Melbourne.
Statistical guidance suggests that between Monday night and
Tuesday, 1-3" should be expected along the I-95 corridor, with a
5-10% chance of 5" or more.
There may be a bit of a lull in the heavy rain on Wednesday, but
another disturbance arriving Wednesday night through Thursday is
likely to enhance these rainbands along the coast once again. From
Wednesday through Friday, an additional 1-2" is most likely on
the coast, with a 10% chance of exceeding 3-4".
All told through daybreak Friday, most likely tallies are between
1-3" over the interior and 2-4" along the coast, with localized
5-7"+ amounts. If this rain falls in a short timeframe, flash
flooding could occur despite the ongoing drought, especially in
urban areas. Hopefully it is spread over much of the week which
would be beneficial to the drought.
Wind & Coastal Impacts:
Winds ramp up in the tightening pressure gradient behind the
surface trough. An initial surge of gusty north-northeast winds
(20-25 mph) is expected this afternoon and evening for areas near
and north of I-4.
As the boundary shifts slowly southward by Tuesday afternoon, all
except the southern Treasure Coast will experience frequent gusty
northeast breezes from 25 to 35 mph. These gusts look stronger
along the coast late on Tuesday into Wednesday, where there is a
40-70% chance of peak gusts exceeding 40 mph. Isolated (10%
chance) peak gusts to 50 mph are possible along the immediate
coast. Windy weather sticks around on Thursday, with gusts from 25
to 30 mph.
This duration of strong onshore winds may cause sporadic power
outages if limbs fall on power lines. Secure any lightweight items,
such as trash cans, that may be tossed about.
At our beaches, expect another round of dangerous surf that will
spread southward with the front. From Tuesday through Thursday,
breakers of 8 to 12 feet will increase run-up at high tides, which
may produce minor to moderate beach erosion. Without question,
numerous life-threatening rip currents are likely. Please stay out
of the ocean this week, and if you visit the beach, never turn your
back on the water.
Expect warm temperatures today (upper 70s to mid 80s), followed up
by cooler highs in the low/mid 70s through mid-week. A few spots
on Tuesday may struggle to reach 70 degrees, especially north of
Orlando.
Friday - Next Weekend...
We should gradually come out of this impactful stretch of weather as
we approach the weekend. Some lingering showers are still forecast
on Friday (40-50%) and perhaps even Saturday (20-30%) as fresh
onshore breezes continue. Rainfall amounts should be lighter,
however. Most locations should be dry by next Sunday. A warming
trend should get underway, with highs from the upper 70s to the
low 80s.
&&
.MARINE...
Issued at 231 AM EDT Mon Apr 6 2026
A cold front reaches the local Atlantic today, north of Cape
Canaveral. It then slowly pushes southward through the waters
before exiting toward the Florida Straits by Thursday. Dangerous
boating conditions will follow this front through mid to late
this week. Northeasterly winds will increase behind the front,
with gale-force gusts expected at times from Tuesday through at
least Wednesday.
Initially, advisory-level winds only reach the Volusia waters
today. By Tuesday afternoon, NE 20-30 kt winds will encompass all
but the Treasure Coast waters. Gusts to gale force are expected to
begin from north to south on Tuesday afternoon, lasting off and on
through Wednesday night. Thus, a Gale Watch has been issued. Seas
will quickly build into Tuesday, 5-8 ft south to 8-12 ft north,
continuing upward to 10-16 ft on Wednesday. Seas remain hazardous
through the rest of the work week as wind only slowly decreases.
&&
.AVIATION...
(18Z TAFs)
Issued at 150 PM EDT Mon Apr 6 2026
A frontal boundary has pushed into north central Florida this
afternoon, increasing moisture across the area, causing shower
and storm chances to increase this afternoon and into tonight.
The east coast sea breeze has formed and is pushing inland this
afternoon. Scattered showers and storms have formed along it,
mainly around Cape Canaveral and across the southern Treasure
Coast. Additional scattered to numerous showers and storms will
form along boundary collisions later this afternoon and into
tonight as the sea breeze pushes inland. Have kept VCTS
ongoing along the coast from TIX southward for the sea breeze, and
have VCTS starting at 19Z across the interior. Have maintained
TEMPO TS with MVFR conditions at MCO/TIX/MLB. Additional TEMPOs
may be needed, but will do those on an as needed basis. Prevailing
MVFR conds developing southward behind the front reaching as far
south as MLB by 03Z-05Z.
N/NE 8-12 knots this afternoon as front crosses northern
terminals and E/NE along the coast south of the Cape as sea breeze
forms into the afternoon. Winds then increase further behind the
front becoming breezy to windy (14-19 knots, gusts to 25-27 knots)
behind the front from KMCO northward after 20-21Z. Highest gusts
will be at DAB aft 19Z. Windy conditions continue Tuesday, with
winds increasing to 15-20 KT with gusts 20-30 KT by mid to late
morning. Periods of light to moderate rainfall will continue
through most of Tuesday, with VCTS starting around 17Z. Have
prevailing -RA starting 11/13Z and going through the day
Tuesday.
&&
.PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS...
DAB 64 72 64 75 / 90 80 60 80
MCO 66 70 65 72 / 80 80 50 80
MLB 66 75 67 75 / 90 80 70 80
VRB 66 77 66 77 / 80 80 70 80
LEE 63 71 63 75 / 90 80 40 70
SFB 65 73 63 75 / 80 80 60 80
ORL 65 72 64 74 / 80 80 50 80
FPR 65 77 65 77 / 80 80 70 80
&&
.MLB WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
FL...Wind Advisory from 7 AM to 10 PM EDT Tuesday for FLZ141.
High Surf Advisory from 8 AM Tuesday to 8 PM EDT Thursday for
FLZ141.
AM...Small Craft Advisory until noon EDT Tuesday for AMZ550-570.
Gale Warning from noon Tuesday to 4 AM EDT Thursday for AMZ550-
570.
Small Craft Advisory from 8 AM to 4 PM EDT Tuesday for AMZ552.
Gale Warning from 4 PM Tuesday to 4 AM EDT Thursday for AMZ552-
572.
Small Craft Advisory from 4 PM to 8 PM EDT Tuesday for AMZ555-
575.
Gale Watch from Tuesday evening through late Wednesday night for
AMZ555-575.
Small Craft Advisory from 2 AM to 4 PM EDT Tuesday for AMZ572.
&&
$$
DISCUSSION...Heil
AVIATION...Watson
National Weather Service Forecast for: Miami, Florida
| This Afternoon ![]() Chance T-storms |
Tonight![]() Chance T-storms then Showers Likely |
Tuesday![]() Heavy Rain |
Tuesday Night ![]() Chance T-storms then Chance Showers |
Wednesday![]() Showers |
| Hi 79 °F | Lo 73 °F | Hi 78 °F | Lo 72 °F | Hi 78 °F |
National Weather Service Forecast for: Miami, Florida Forecast Details
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