Marine Weather and Tide Forecast for Kennebunk, ME
![]() | Sunrise 5:52 AM Sunset 7:29 PM Moonrise 6:44 AM Moonset 10:55 PM |
Marine Forecasts
NOTE: Zones updated 4/16/2026. Some zones changed. Use Edit if needed.
ANZ154 Coastal Waters From Cape Elizabeth, Me To Merrimack River, Ma Out 25 Nm- 706 Am Edt Sun Apr 19 2026
.small craft advisory in effect from 4 pm edt this afternoon through this evening - .
Today - S winds 5 to 10 kt, becoming W 15 to 20 kt with gusts up to 25 kt late. Seas 3 to 4 ft. Wave detail: E 4 ft at 7 seconds. Areas of dense fog early this morning, then patchy dense fog late this morning. A chance of rain early this morning, then rain with a slight chance of tstms late this morning and afternoon. Vsby 1 nm or less, increasing to 1 to 3 nm this afternoon.
Tonight - NW winds 15 to 20 kt with gusts up to 30 kt, becoming W 10 to 15 kt with gusts up to 20 kt after midnight. Seas 3 to 5 ft. Wave detail: E 4 ft at 8 seconds and nw 3 ft at 3 seconds. Rain likely in the evening with vsby 1 to 3 nm.
Mon - W winds 10 to 15 kt with gusts up to 20 kt, diminishing to 5 to 10 kt in the afternoon. Seas 2 to 3 ft. Wave detail: E 3 ft at 7 seconds and W 2 ft at 3 seconds. A chance of showers in the afternoon.
Mon night - N winds 10 to 15 kt with gusts up to 25 kt. Seas 2 to 3 ft. Wave detail: nw 2 ft at 3 seconds and E 2 ft at 7 seconds. A chance of showers in the evening.
Tue - N winds 10 to 15 kt with gusts up to 20 kt, becoming se 5 to 10 kt in the afternoon. Seas 2 to 3 ft. Wave detail: ne 2 ft at 6 seconds.
Tue night - S winds 10 to 15 kt with gusts up to 20 kt. Seas 2 to 4 ft. Wave detail: S 3 ft at 4 seconds and E 2 ft at 7 seconds.
Wed - S winds 10 to 15 kt with gusts up to 20 kt. Seas 2 to 4 ft.
Wed night - S winds around 10 kt, becoming sw after midnight. Seas 2 to 3 ft.
Thu - W winds 5 to 10 kt. Seas 2 to 3 ft.
Thu night - NW winds 5 to 10 kt. Seas around 2 ft.
winds and seas higher in and near tstms.
winds and seas higher in and near tstms.
ANZ100 706 Am Edt Sun Apr 19 2026
Synopsis for stonington me to merrimack river ma out to 25 nm - Areas of fog and drizzle will continue through this morning with southerly winds. Rain and fog is then expected through the rest of the day and into this evening. Winds turn offshore behind the system with high pressure building in Monday into Tuesday.
7 Day Forecast for Marine Location Near Kennebunk, ME

NEW! Add second zone forecast
| Wells Click for Map Sun -- 12:42 AM EDT 10.85 feet High Tide Sun -- 05:53 AM EDT Sunrise Sun -- 06:44 AM EDT Moonrise Sun -- 06:59 AM EDT -1.44 feet Low Tide Sun -- 01:19 PM EDT 9.64 feet High Tide Sun -- 07:09 PM EDT -0.29 feet Low Tide Sun -- 07:30 PM EDT Sunset Sun -- 10:55 PM EDT Moonset Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION |   |
Wells, Webhannet River, Maine, Tide feet
| 12 am |
| 10.5 |
| 1 am |
| 10.8 |
| 2 am |
| 9.7 |
| 3 am |
| 7.5 |
| 4 am |
| 4.5 |
| 5 am |
| 1.5 |
| 6 am |
| -0.7 |
| 7 am |
| -1.4 |
| 8 am |
| -0.7 |
| 9 am |
| 1.2 |
| 10 am |
| 3.8 |
| 11 am |
| 6.4 |
| 12 pm |
| 8.5 |
| 1 pm |
| 9.6 |
| 2 pm |
| 9.3 |
| 3 pm |
| 7.9 |
| 4 pm |
| 5.5 |
| 5 pm |
| 2.9 |
| 6 pm |
| 0.7 |
| 7 pm |
| -0.3 |
| 8 pm |
| 0.2 |
| 9 pm |
| 2 |
| 10 pm |
| 4.5 |
| 11 pm |
| 7.1 |
| Portsmouth Harbor entrance (depth 8 ft) Click for Map Flood direction 342 true Ebb direction 194 true Sun -- 02:14 AM EDT -0.00 knots Slack Sun -- 05:14 AM EDT -1.86 knots Max Ebb Sun -- 05:54 AM EDT Sunrise Sun -- 06:46 AM EDT Moonrise Sun -- 08:58 AM EDT 0.00 knots Slack Sun -- 11:11 AM EDT 1.29 knots Max Flood Sun -- 03:04 PM EDT -0.00 knots Slack Sun -- 05:39 PM EDT -1.60 knots Max Ebb Sun -- 07:30 PM EDT Sunset Sun -- 09:01 PM EDT 0.00 knots Slack Sun -- 10:54 PM EDT Moonset Sun -- 11:24 PM EDT 1.41 knots Max Flood Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION |   |
Portsmouth Harbor entrance (depth 8 ft), New Hampshire Current, knots
| 12 am |
| 1 |
| 1 am |
| 0.5 |
| 2 am |
| 0.1 |
| 3 am |
| -0.5 |
| 4 am |
| -1.3 |
| 5 am |
| -1.8 |
| 6 am |
| -1.7 |
| 7 am |
| -1.2 |
| 8 am |
| -0.7 |
| 9 am |
| 0 |
| 10 am |
| 0.9 |
| 11 am |
| 1.3 |
| 12 pm |
| 1.2 |
| 1 pm |
| 0.8 |
| 2 pm |
| 0.5 |
| 3 pm |
| 0 |
| 4 pm |
| -0.7 |
| 5 pm |
| -1.4 |
| 6 pm |
| -1.6 |
| 7 pm |
| -1.1 |
| 8 pm |
| -0.6 |
| 9 pm |
| -0 |
| 10 pm |
| 0.8 |
| 11 pm |
| 1.4 |
Area Discussion for Gray/Portland, ME
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FXUS61 KGYX 191029 AFDGYX
Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Gray ME 629 AM EDT Sun Apr 19 2026
WHAT HAS CHANGED
No major changes were needed for the morning update as rain continues to spread across the region.
KEY MESSAGES
1. Frontal systems brings widespread rainfall through today with rain changing to snow from the mountains to the Canadian Border this afternoon.
2. Anomalously cold air aloft may lead to afternoon convective showers on Monday.
3. A cooler and unsettled pattern gradually moderates through the week.
DISCUSSION
KEY MESSAGE 1 DESCRIPTION...
No significant changes with the latest round of NWP guidance and NBM with regards to the incoming frontal system that crosses today.
Occluding low pressure east of James Bay will send a cold front into northern New England this morning with widespread rain expected into the afternoon. A trough digging into the Ohio Valley will take on a slightly negative tilt with a wave of low pressure forming along the front. Temperatures at 925 mb will drop a few degrees below freezing across the mountains and points north this afternoon allowing for rain to change to snow with light accumulations to valley floors and couple inches across the higher terrain. Below freezing air at 925 mb will advect all the way to the coast and some snow cannot be ruled out south of the mountains although snow is not expected to accumulate. Highs temperatures will likely peak around mid day in the 40s with temperatures falling through the afternoon.
Precipitation comes to an end this evening with breezy northwest winds advecting cooler and drier air into the region overnight.
Storm total QPF will generally be 05 to 0.75 inches with higher amounts in the mountains. Low temperatures tonight will range from the mid 20s north to low 30s south.
KEY MESSAGE 2 DESCRIPTION...
Behind Sunday's cold front, the week will start on a chilly note.
700 mb temperatures will fall to -20C by Monday afternoon. Combined with upper-level temperature anomalies of -2.5 SD from climatology per the NAEFS situational awareness table, it will be unusually cold aloft. Regardless, the high April sun angle should still help daytime surface temperatures get into the 40s.
Monday's forecast had previously looked dry, but new guidance is suggesting a signal for some scattered afternoon convective showers.
With such a cold airmass, it won't take a lot to get clouds to build vertically as the sun heats the surface. In fact, some guidance is suggesting modest instability of ~100 J/Kg SBCAPE with very steep low-level lapse rates near 9.0 K/Km. In addition, a shortwave and associated vort max will swing through, which will provide a source of lift. There is a chance for rain to mix with snow or possibly even graupel given these ingredients. Any showers that develop will be scattered and quick-hitting at any one location.
KEY MESSAGE 3 DESCRIPTION...
After a hard freeze on Tuesday morning, a moderating trend should commence as we head deeper into next week. Tuesday currently looks dry with some subsidence behind Monday's shortwave, but with anomalously cold air still upstairs, cannot rule out some cloud cover/showers in the mountains.
A difficult-to-time shortwave brings the next widespread chance for precipitation on Wednesday, but with POPs only hovering around 15- 30%, it does not look like a washout by any means. Regardless, light snow is once again possible for the northern zones given cold air lingering. Height rises late in the week suggest temperatures will rebound close to seasonal averages with 50s in the forecast for late week highs currently.
AVIATION /12Z SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/
Fog and low cigs will continue bringing IFR/LIFR across all sites except LEB and HIE which may hang on to MVFR conditions for a couple more hours. RA will spread from west to east this morning with RA persisting through early this evening along with FG. Light and variable winds during the morning will become NW with gusts up 20 kts by early afternoon. Conditions will gradually improve tonight.
Outlook...
Monday: Scattered rain and snow showers may bring brief and localized restrictions Monday, especially at HIE. Otherwise mainly VFR conditions with NW winds at 10-15 kts during the daytime before becoming light and variable at night.
Tuesday: VFR conditions with light winds. Lowering ceilings possible at night.
Wednesday: Showers and MVFR are possible, otherwise VFR conditions continue.
Thursday - Friday: Mainly VFR expected.
MARINE
Southerly winds will prevail through the morning ahead of a cold front with gusts around 15 kts and seas less than 5 feet. The front crosses the waters tonight with NW winds gusting 20-25 kts and seas 4-5 feet. Brief SCA conditions will be possible this afternoon and evening outside of the bays.
Winds and seas diminish Monday into Tuesday as high pressure builds over the Northeast. High pressure shifts southeast of the waters Tuesday night into Wednesday as a weak system approaches from the west with winds turning southwesterly.
GYX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
ME...None.
NH...None.
MARINE...Small Craft Advisory from 4 PM this afternoon to midnight EDT tonight for ANZ150-152-154.
Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Gray ME 629 AM EDT Sun Apr 19 2026
WHAT HAS CHANGED
No major changes were needed for the morning update as rain continues to spread across the region.
KEY MESSAGES
1. Frontal systems brings widespread rainfall through today with rain changing to snow from the mountains to the Canadian Border this afternoon.
2. Anomalously cold air aloft may lead to afternoon convective showers on Monday.
3. A cooler and unsettled pattern gradually moderates through the week.
DISCUSSION
KEY MESSAGE 1 DESCRIPTION...
No significant changes with the latest round of NWP guidance and NBM with regards to the incoming frontal system that crosses today.
Occluding low pressure east of James Bay will send a cold front into northern New England this morning with widespread rain expected into the afternoon. A trough digging into the Ohio Valley will take on a slightly negative tilt with a wave of low pressure forming along the front. Temperatures at 925 mb will drop a few degrees below freezing across the mountains and points north this afternoon allowing for rain to change to snow with light accumulations to valley floors and couple inches across the higher terrain. Below freezing air at 925 mb will advect all the way to the coast and some snow cannot be ruled out south of the mountains although snow is not expected to accumulate. Highs temperatures will likely peak around mid day in the 40s with temperatures falling through the afternoon.
Precipitation comes to an end this evening with breezy northwest winds advecting cooler and drier air into the region overnight.
Storm total QPF will generally be 05 to 0.75 inches with higher amounts in the mountains. Low temperatures tonight will range from the mid 20s north to low 30s south.
KEY MESSAGE 2 DESCRIPTION...
Behind Sunday's cold front, the week will start on a chilly note.
700 mb temperatures will fall to -20C by Monday afternoon. Combined with upper-level temperature anomalies of -2.5 SD from climatology per the NAEFS situational awareness table, it will be unusually cold aloft. Regardless, the high April sun angle should still help daytime surface temperatures get into the 40s.
Monday's forecast had previously looked dry, but new guidance is suggesting a signal for some scattered afternoon convective showers.
With such a cold airmass, it won't take a lot to get clouds to build vertically as the sun heats the surface. In fact, some guidance is suggesting modest instability of ~100 J/Kg SBCAPE with very steep low-level lapse rates near 9.0 K/Km. In addition, a shortwave and associated vort max will swing through, which will provide a source of lift. There is a chance for rain to mix with snow or possibly even graupel given these ingredients. Any showers that develop will be scattered and quick-hitting at any one location.
KEY MESSAGE 3 DESCRIPTION...
After a hard freeze on Tuesday morning, a moderating trend should commence as we head deeper into next week. Tuesday currently looks dry with some subsidence behind Monday's shortwave, but with anomalously cold air still upstairs, cannot rule out some cloud cover/showers in the mountains.
A difficult-to-time shortwave brings the next widespread chance for precipitation on Wednesday, but with POPs only hovering around 15- 30%, it does not look like a washout by any means. Regardless, light snow is once again possible for the northern zones given cold air lingering. Height rises late in the week suggest temperatures will rebound close to seasonal averages with 50s in the forecast for late week highs currently.
AVIATION /12Z SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/
Fog and low cigs will continue bringing IFR/LIFR across all sites except LEB and HIE which may hang on to MVFR conditions for a couple more hours. RA will spread from west to east this morning with RA persisting through early this evening along with FG. Light and variable winds during the morning will become NW with gusts up 20 kts by early afternoon. Conditions will gradually improve tonight.
Outlook...
Monday: Scattered rain and snow showers may bring brief and localized restrictions Monday, especially at HIE. Otherwise mainly VFR conditions with NW winds at 10-15 kts during the daytime before becoming light and variable at night.
Tuesday: VFR conditions with light winds. Lowering ceilings possible at night.
Wednesday: Showers and MVFR are possible, otherwise VFR conditions continue.
Thursday - Friday: Mainly VFR expected.
MARINE
Southerly winds will prevail through the morning ahead of a cold front with gusts around 15 kts and seas less than 5 feet. The front crosses the waters tonight with NW winds gusting 20-25 kts and seas 4-5 feet. Brief SCA conditions will be possible this afternoon and evening outside of the bays.
Winds and seas diminish Monday into Tuesday as high pressure builds over the Northeast. High pressure shifts southeast of the waters Tuesday night into Wednesday as a weak system approaches from the west with winds turning southwesterly.
GYX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
ME...None.
NH...None.
MARINE...Small Craft Advisory from 4 PM this afternoon to midnight EDT tonight for ANZ150-152-154.
| Stations | Dist | Age | Wind | Air | Water | Waves | inHg | DewPt |
| WEXM1 - Wells Reserve, ME | 1 mi | 72 min | SSE 1.9 | 44°F | 44°F | |||
| 44030 - Buoy B0102 - Western Maine Shelf | 12 mi | 72 min | SSE 5.8G | 43°F | ||||
| SEIM1 | 19 mi | 54 min | 50°F | 29.78 | ||||
| 44073 | 21 mi | 87 min | 45°F | 44°F | ||||
| BGXN3 - Great Bay Reserve, NH | 23 mi | 87 min | ESE 1 | 44°F | 29.80 | 44°F | ||
| 44007 - PORTLAND 12 NM Southeast of Portland,ME | 26 mi | 42 min | S 5.8G | 43°F | 44°F | 29.77 | 42°F | |
| CASM1 - 8418150 - Portland, ME | 29 mi | 54 min | SE 4.1G | 46°F | 29.73 | |||
| 44098 - Jeffrey's Ledge, NH (160) | 41 mi | 42 min | 43°F | 43°F | 4 ft |
Wind History for No Ports station near this location
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Airport Reports
Link to 1 hour of 5 minute data for KSFM
Terminal Aerodrome Forecast (TAF) for KSFM
Wind History Graph: SFM
(wind in knots)GEOS Local Image of Northeast
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