A hard low at noon and a rising afternoon tide set the stage for a productive fishing window at the inlet
TODAY: A classic late-May tidal pattern locks in at Sebastian Inlet on Tuesday, with a sharp low tide at noon and two bookending highs that frame the day for anglers, swimmers and boaters alike. Expect warm, humid conditions typical of the start of rainy season on the Treasure Coast.
TONIGHT: Conditions ease after the 6:21 p.m. high. Overnight winds should lighten, with calm conditions favoring an early-morning departure Wednesday.
THIS WEEK: The tidal cycle continues to rotate later each day. Anglers who plan ahead now can position for the incoming afternoon flood — historically the most productive window at Sebastian — before weekend crowds arrive.
ON THE WATER: Tuesday's tidal drop is the story. The inlet hits a dead flat zero feet at noon, flushing baitfish hard through the cut and stacking snook and redfish along the south jetty rocks. That zero-foot low means maximum current velocity on the outgoing — work a live pilchard or a DOA shrimp tight to the rocks on the incoming tide between 1 and 4 p.m. as water pushes back through. The evening high of 2.6 feet at 6:21 p.m. edges above the morning high, signaling a building tidal range and stronger flows ahead. NOAA Center for Operational Oceanographic Products and Services (CO-OPS), Sebastian Inlet station, issued tide predictions for May 26, 2026.
ALERTS: No active NWS watches, warnings or advisories are in effect for Indian River County at time of publication. [NEEDS VERIFICATION — confirm with NWS Melbourne Area Forecast Office before press time.]
This article was generated with AI assistance using publicly available information. It was reviewed and approved by a human editor before publication. TC Sentinel uses AI writing tools in accordance with FTC guidelines.
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