Marine Weather and Tide Forecast for Akron, OH
![]() | Sunrise 5:51 AM Sunset 9:01 PM Moonrise 11:02 PM Moonset 7:39 AM |
LEZ146 Expires:202506142015;;226660 Fzus51 Kcle 141315 Nshcle
nearshore marine forecast national weather service cleveland oh 915 am edt Sat jun 14 2025
for waters within five nautical miles of shore
waves are the significant wave height - the average of the highest 1/3 of the wave spectrum. Occasional wave height is the average of the highest 1/10 of the wave spectrum.
lez144>148-142015- the islands to vermilion oh-vermilion to avon point oh- avon point to willowick oh-willowick to geneva-on-the lake oh- geneva-on-the-lake to conneaut oh- 915 am edt Sat jun 14 2025
.small craft advisory in effect until 8 pm edt this evening - .
Rest of today - Northeast winds 15 to 20 knots. Showers late this morning, then a chance of showers this afternoon. Waves 2 to 4 feet building to 3 to 5 feet. Waves occasionally around 6 feet.
Tonight - Northeast winds 15 to 20 knots diminishing to 10 to 15 knots. Partly cloudy in the evening, then becoming mostly cloudy. Waves 2 to 4 feet subsiding to 1 to 3 feet.
Sunday - Northeast winds 10 to 15 knots increasing to 15 to 20 knots. Mostly Sunny. Waves 1 to 3 feet building to 2 to 4 feet.
Sunday night - Northeast winds 5 to 15 knots becoming east. Partly cloudy. Waves 2 to 4 feet subsiding to 1 to 3 feet.
see lake erie open lakes forecast for Monday through Wednesday.
the water temperature off toledo is 68 degrees, off cleveland 63 degrees, and off erie 64 degrees.
nearshore marine forecast national weather service cleveland oh 915 am edt Sat jun 14 2025
for waters within five nautical miles of shore
waves are the significant wave height - the average of the highest 1/3 of the wave spectrum. Occasional wave height is the average of the highest 1/10 of the wave spectrum.
lez144>148-142015- the islands to vermilion oh-vermilion to avon point oh- avon point to willowick oh-willowick to geneva-on-the lake oh- geneva-on-the-lake to conneaut oh- 915 am edt Sat jun 14 2025
see lake erie open lakes forecast for Monday through Wednesday.
the water temperature off toledo is 68 degrees, off cleveland 63 degrees, and off erie 64 degrees.
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7 Day Forecast for Marine Location Near Akron, OH

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Area Discussion for Cleveland, OH
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FXUS61 KCLE 141941 AFDCLE
Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Cleveland OH 341 PM EDT Sat Jun 14 2025
SYNOPSIS
A stationary front gradually drifts south of the area today before high pressure briefly builds in from the north tonight.
This front lifts back north as a warm front Monday night as low pressure moves into the Great Lakes region. A cold front will move east across the area on Thursday.
NEAR TERM /THROUGH SUNDAY NIGHT/
A negatively tilted upper-level trough extends from northeast Indiana towards the Mid-Mississippi Valley (AR/MO/IL/KY/TN area). An area of confluence from the central part of this trough into the northeastern quadrant (which is collocated with the surface stationary front) will yield a narrow corridor of shower and thunderstorms into the southern part of our forecast area across central Ohio with a few isolated showers elsewhere. Coverage is expected to be a lot less than what we saw across northern Ohio and Northwest Pennsylvania earlier, though there could be isolated instances minor flooding where any thunderstorms are able to persist, especially given very moist environment and somewhat slow storm motions of around 10-20 knots (depending on exact location).
The stationary front gradually sags south of the forecast area and a drier airmass associated with high pressure builds in from the north. Aside from some isolated showers skirting across the southern part of the forecast area Sunday afternoon, the rest of the near term period should be precipitation-free. Patchy fog may be possible in some locations tonight and again Sunday night.
SHORT TERM /MONDAY THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT/
That front gradually lifts north across the area Monday afternoon into Monday night, with persistent southwest flow advecting increasingly warm, moist air into the region Monday night through Tuesday night. Isolated showers and thunderstorms may be possible Monday afternoon in our south and east, becoming increasingly more likely by Tuesday and Tuesday night. Most model guidance has Tuesday with relatively benign thunderstorm activity Tuesday afternoon/evening due to modest instability and rather limited shear. The 12Z NAM randomly has like 1500-2500 J/kg MUCAPE and 40 knots of deep-layer shear, which is a massive outlier compared to most other model guidance. It develops this in response to a compact shortwave trough currently over the Great Plains region, with convective influence causing it to become more intense than would otherwise expect. Currently going to throw out this model due to it being an extreme outlier but could be worth watching in the coming days.
LONG TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/
An upper-level trough approaches from the west as it moves into the Great Lakes region Wednesday into Wednesday night. This is generally when warmth, moisture, and synoptic-scale lift will peak for the most likely precipitation chances of the work week (60-70% PoPs on Wednesday and Wednesday night). Based on current model guidance, there is a good chance for severe weather, with MUCAPE around 1500- 2000 J/kg and 30 knots of deep-layer shear. Current D5 SPC outlook has primary severe weather risk located to our west, though the past few runs of model guidance have a slightly more open trough rather than a closed low, progressing a bit faster (shifting the threat a bit farther east). 00Z GFS ML severe weather probabilities are similar to what SPC has, though 00Z ENS ML has severe weather probabilities maximized farther east over the Ohio Valley, which better matches the trends observed in the broader model data. Either way, Wednesday will be worth watching.
By Thursday, most model guidance have the low and associated upper- level trough into eastern Ontario and southern Quebec with the cold front moving through. Any showers and thunderstorms will likely be associated with either the primary cold front or a secondary cold front/trough during the afternoon/evening hours. It's possible there could be a few stronger storms, especially if the slower model guidance is correct, though it seems unlikely as a reversal in trends would be needed. Friday should should quiet as high pressure builds in, and despite the cold frontal passage, temperatures really won't cool down too much.
Saturday onward looks active as persist southwest flows advect warm, moist air to the region. Already have mid to upper 80s in the temperature forecast with our first 90 degree days possible late this weekend into early next week.
AVIATION /18Z Saturday THROUGH Thursday/
Non-VFR conditions, ranging between MVFR to LIFR, are expected to persist across the area into the early overnight hours as a very slow moving boundary continues to sag south across the area. Heavy rain showers from this morning have primarily diminished at this point, leaving scattered light showers this afternoon. These showers may briefly result in local visibilities dropping to as low as 3SM, however the bulk of diminished conditions are coming as a result of ceilings between 400-1500 ft across the area. All precipitation should primarily end between 22-00Z this evening as high pressure nudges south.
This should allow conditions for terminals along the lakeshore to rebound to high end MVFR or even VFR by Sunday late morning/early afternoon. Elsewhere, patchy fog is expected to develop overnight, possibly resulting in prolonged IFR conditions. By late Sunday morning, fog should diminish and ceilings begin to lift, allowing all terminals to at least rebound to MVFR by Sunday afternoon.
North to northeasterly winds of 5-10 knots will continue through the entire TAF period.
Outlook...Non-VFR expected with periodic showers and thunderstorms this weekend through Wednesday, especially Sunday afternoon and again on Tuesday through Wednesday.
MARINE
A nearly stationary boundary lingers south of the lakeshore today, allowing for winds to persist from the northeast at 15-20 knots this afternoon. These conditions have allowed for waves along the lakeshore to build to 2-4 feet, with highest waves across the central and western basins. Opting to maintain the Small Craft Advisory through 00Z this evening given that wave heights will continue to reach around 4 feet, but opting to get rid of the Beach Hazard given the wind direction and moderate risk for rip currents.
As a high pressure system nudges south, winds tonight will weaken to 5-10 knots but remain from the northeast. A brief increase in winds up to 15 knots may occur Sunday afternoon, but should be very marginal for any additional headlines needed. By Sunday night, the high pressure again becomes dominant with northeast winds of 5-10 knots. Winds finally shift on Tuesday to gain a more south-southwest direction as a warm front lifts north across the area. As the parent low moves across the region midweek, winds are expected to increase from the southwest to 15-20 knots and will be another period to watch for additional headlines.
CLE WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
OH...None.
PA...None.
MARINE...Small Craft Advisory until 8 PM EDT this evening for LEZ143>149.
Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Cleveland OH 341 PM EDT Sat Jun 14 2025
SYNOPSIS
A stationary front gradually drifts south of the area today before high pressure briefly builds in from the north tonight.
This front lifts back north as a warm front Monday night as low pressure moves into the Great Lakes region. A cold front will move east across the area on Thursday.
NEAR TERM /THROUGH SUNDAY NIGHT/
A negatively tilted upper-level trough extends from northeast Indiana towards the Mid-Mississippi Valley (AR/MO/IL/KY/TN area). An area of confluence from the central part of this trough into the northeastern quadrant (which is collocated with the surface stationary front) will yield a narrow corridor of shower and thunderstorms into the southern part of our forecast area across central Ohio with a few isolated showers elsewhere. Coverage is expected to be a lot less than what we saw across northern Ohio and Northwest Pennsylvania earlier, though there could be isolated instances minor flooding where any thunderstorms are able to persist, especially given very moist environment and somewhat slow storm motions of around 10-20 knots (depending on exact location).
The stationary front gradually sags south of the forecast area and a drier airmass associated with high pressure builds in from the north. Aside from some isolated showers skirting across the southern part of the forecast area Sunday afternoon, the rest of the near term period should be precipitation-free. Patchy fog may be possible in some locations tonight and again Sunday night.
SHORT TERM /MONDAY THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT/
That front gradually lifts north across the area Monday afternoon into Monday night, with persistent southwest flow advecting increasingly warm, moist air into the region Monday night through Tuesday night. Isolated showers and thunderstorms may be possible Monday afternoon in our south and east, becoming increasingly more likely by Tuesday and Tuesday night. Most model guidance has Tuesday with relatively benign thunderstorm activity Tuesday afternoon/evening due to modest instability and rather limited shear. The 12Z NAM randomly has like 1500-2500 J/kg MUCAPE and 40 knots of deep-layer shear, which is a massive outlier compared to most other model guidance. It develops this in response to a compact shortwave trough currently over the Great Plains region, with convective influence causing it to become more intense than would otherwise expect. Currently going to throw out this model due to it being an extreme outlier but could be worth watching in the coming days.
LONG TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/
An upper-level trough approaches from the west as it moves into the Great Lakes region Wednesday into Wednesday night. This is generally when warmth, moisture, and synoptic-scale lift will peak for the most likely precipitation chances of the work week (60-70% PoPs on Wednesday and Wednesday night). Based on current model guidance, there is a good chance for severe weather, with MUCAPE around 1500- 2000 J/kg and 30 knots of deep-layer shear. Current D5 SPC outlook has primary severe weather risk located to our west, though the past few runs of model guidance have a slightly more open trough rather than a closed low, progressing a bit faster (shifting the threat a bit farther east). 00Z GFS ML severe weather probabilities are similar to what SPC has, though 00Z ENS ML has severe weather probabilities maximized farther east over the Ohio Valley, which better matches the trends observed in the broader model data. Either way, Wednesday will be worth watching.
By Thursday, most model guidance have the low and associated upper- level trough into eastern Ontario and southern Quebec with the cold front moving through. Any showers and thunderstorms will likely be associated with either the primary cold front or a secondary cold front/trough during the afternoon/evening hours. It's possible there could be a few stronger storms, especially if the slower model guidance is correct, though it seems unlikely as a reversal in trends would be needed. Friday should should quiet as high pressure builds in, and despite the cold frontal passage, temperatures really won't cool down too much.
Saturday onward looks active as persist southwest flows advect warm, moist air to the region. Already have mid to upper 80s in the temperature forecast with our first 90 degree days possible late this weekend into early next week.
AVIATION /18Z Saturday THROUGH Thursday/
Non-VFR conditions, ranging between MVFR to LIFR, are expected to persist across the area into the early overnight hours as a very slow moving boundary continues to sag south across the area. Heavy rain showers from this morning have primarily diminished at this point, leaving scattered light showers this afternoon. These showers may briefly result in local visibilities dropping to as low as 3SM, however the bulk of diminished conditions are coming as a result of ceilings between 400-1500 ft across the area. All precipitation should primarily end between 22-00Z this evening as high pressure nudges south.
This should allow conditions for terminals along the lakeshore to rebound to high end MVFR or even VFR by Sunday late morning/early afternoon. Elsewhere, patchy fog is expected to develop overnight, possibly resulting in prolonged IFR conditions. By late Sunday morning, fog should diminish and ceilings begin to lift, allowing all terminals to at least rebound to MVFR by Sunday afternoon.
North to northeasterly winds of 5-10 knots will continue through the entire TAF period.
Outlook...Non-VFR expected with periodic showers and thunderstorms this weekend through Wednesday, especially Sunday afternoon and again on Tuesday through Wednesday.
MARINE
A nearly stationary boundary lingers south of the lakeshore today, allowing for winds to persist from the northeast at 15-20 knots this afternoon. These conditions have allowed for waves along the lakeshore to build to 2-4 feet, with highest waves across the central and western basins. Opting to maintain the Small Craft Advisory through 00Z this evening given that wave heights will continue to reach around 4 feet, but opting to get rid of the Beach Hazard given the wind direction and moderate risk for rip currents.
As a high pressure system nudges south, winds tonight will weaken to 5-10 knots but remain from the northeast. A brief increase in winds up to 15 knots may occur Sunday afternoon, but should be very marginal for any additional headlines needed. By Sunday night, the high pressure again becomes dominant with northeast winds of 5-10 knots. Winds finally shift on Tuesday to gain a more south-southwest direction as a warm front lifts north across the area. As the parent low moves across the region midweek, winds are expected to increase from the southwest to 15-20 knots and will be another period to watch for additional headlines.
CLE WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
OH...None.
PA...None.
MARINE...Small Craft Advisory until 8 PM EDT this evening for LEZ143>149.
Stations | Dist | Age | Wind | Air | Water | Waves | inHg | DewPt |
45205 | 32 mi | 38 min | NNE 12G | 61°F | 62°F | 3 ft | 29.98 | 58°F |
CNDO1 - 9063063 - Cleveland, OH | 33 mi | 50 min | ENE 14G | 63°F | 29.98 | |||
45176 | 35 mi | 38 min | E 18G | 62°F | 64°F | 4 ft | 29.98 | 59°F |
45196 | 36 mi | 48 min | 16G | 62°F | 64°F | 4 ft | 30.00 | 60°F |
45206 | 36 mi | 38 min | 12G | 61°F | 60°F | 29.94 | 58°F | |
45197 | 38 mi | 48 min | E 16G | 61°F | 59°F | 3 ft | 29.98 | 57°F |
45204 | 43 mi | 48 min | NE 9.7G | 61°F | 4 ft | 29.98 | 59°F | |
LORO1 | 45 mi | 68 min | ENE 7G | 61°F | ||||
45207 | 46 mi | 48 min | ENE 14G | 62°F | 63°F | 3 ft | 29.98 | 57°F |
45164 | 48 mi | 38 min | 18G | 62°F | 62°F | 5 ft | ||
FAIO1 - 9063053 - Fairport, OH | 50 mi | 50 min | ENE 17G | 64°F | 29.98 | |||
OWXO1 - Old Woman Creek, OH | 56 mi | 113 min | NE 5.1 | 61°F | 30.04 | 60°F |
Wind History for Cleveland, OH
toggle option: (graph/table)
Airport Reports
Airport | Dist | Age | Wind kt | Vis | Sky | Weather | Air | DewPt | RH | inHg |
KAKR AKRON FULTON INTL,OH | 4 sm | 8 min | N 07 | 10 sm | Overcast | 72°F | 66°F | 83% | 30.00 | |
KCAK AKRONCANTON RGNL,OH | 11 sm | 47 min | WNW 07 | 10 sm | Mostly Cloudy | 75°F | 66°F | 74% | 29.99 | |
KPOV PORTAGE COUNTY,OH | 18 sm | 23 min | N 04 | 10 sm | Overcast | 70°F | 64°F | 83% | 30.02 | |
KBJJ WAYNE COUNTY,OH | 24 sm | 42 min | NNW 07 | 10 sm | Overcast | 73°F | 66°F | 78% | 30.00 |
Link to 1 hour of 5 minute data for KAKR
Terminal Aerodrome Forecast (TAF) for KAKR
Wind History Graph: AKR
(wind in knots)GEOS Local Image of Mid-Atlantic
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Cleveland, OH,

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