Puerto Rico Virgin Islands Surf Forecast High Rip Current Risk Monday March 23rd 2026
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A HIGH RIP CURRENT RISK remains in effect through this afternoon across most of northern Puerto Rico, so exercise extreme caution if you're planning to hit the water today.
Starting with the northern coast, we've got some excellent surf conditions. San Juan and the surrounding beaches are looking at around 6 feet of swell with a high rip current risk continuing through this afternoon. Expect mostly cloudy skies with numerous showers and northeast winds around 10 miles per hour.
Up in the northeast, the beaches of Rio Grande, Luquillo, Fajardo and Humacao are also seeing 6-foot surf with that same high rip current risk. It'll be mostly cloudy with showers throughout the day.
Moving along the north central coast near Arecibo and Dorado, similar conditions with 6-foot waves and high rip currents. You'll catch mostly sunny skies interrupted by numerous showers.
The northwestern beaches of Aguadilla and Isabela are firing with 6-foot surf and a high rip current risk in effect. Northeast winds will run 10 to 15 miles per hour with scattered showers.
Down in Mayaguez, the high rip current risk actually expires early this morning, so conditions ease up a bit. You're looking at around 5 feet of surf with a moderate rip current risk and mostly sunny skies with scattered showers.
The southern coast presents a much different picture. Southwest Puerto Rico near Cabo Rojo and Guanica features calmer 4-foot surf with a moderate rip current risk, while Ponce and the southeast beaches around Arroyo show low rip current risks with smaller 2 to 3-foot waves.
For the islands, Culebra is experiencing 5-foot surf with a moderate rip current risk and northeast winds at 15 miles per hour. Vieques shows 4-foot waves with moderate rip currents, while St. Thomas and St. John in the Virgin Islands are at 5 feet with moderate rip currents. St. Croix rounds out the forecast with 4-foot surf and moderate conditions.
Looking ahead to Tuesday, rip current risks drop significantly across the board, shifting to moderate or low levels. Surf heights generally decrease by a foot across most areas as a swell period winds down. Expect mostly sunny to partly sunny skies with showers continuing throughout the day.
Wednesday through Friday show a relatively consistent pattern with surf heights ranging from 2 to 5 feet depending on location. Conditions gradually improve with mostly sunny to partly sunny skies, though scattered showers and isolated thunderstorms will pop up, especially toward Friday. East winds will prevail at 5 to 15 miles per hour depending on your location.
Bottom line: if you're heading out today, especially on the northern beaches, respect the high rip current risk and use the buddy system. The swell is solid, but those currents are dangerous. For the rest of the week, conditions mellow out considerably with smaller waves and lower rip current risks across most of the area.
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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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