Cornwall
Cornwall sits on the south-western tip of Britain and runs one of the largest tide ranges in Europe. Newquay on the north coast sees a mean range close to 4.5 metres and spring tides push toward 7. The Bristol Channel approaches just to the north produce world-class swings: Avonmouth tops 12 metres at the largest spring tides. The pattern across the county is semidiurnal, two highs and two lows about twelve and a half hours apart. That swing transforms the day on every coast: Fistral and Watergate Bay's beaches widen by tens of metres at low water, the Gannel estuary south of Newquay drains almost completely on each ebb and refills over a four-hour flood, and tide pools at the foot of the headlands open up on the lowest spring tides of the month. Surfers read the same table differently — the local breaks reshape across each cycle. UK Hydrographic Office Admiralty TotalTide is the authoritative British tide product.
Cornwall tide stations
Tide times are guidance for planning, not navigation. See the methodology page for how the data is built.