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South Carolina

South Carolina's Lowcountry coast — Charleston Harbor, Folly Beach, the Stono inlets, the long ribbon of barrier islands and tidal marshes south of Cape Hatteras — runs a clean semidiurnal tide with a moderate range. Charleston Harbor sits at about 1.7 metres mean range, two highs and two lows of comparable size each day, twelve and a half hours apart. Spring tides push toward 2.0 metres and the marsh creeks behind Folly and the Stono inlet run hard on every ebb. Shell-hunting along Folly's intertidal zone is best on the lowest predicted lows, which cluster around new and full moons; an hour either side of a sub-0.3 metre low gives a wide walkable washline. Marsh-creek paddlers time their out-and-back to the rising flood. Hurricane season runs June through November, and a tropical-storm surge can stack one to two metres above predicted on top of normal tide — that is when emergency-management forecasts override everything else. The harmonic predictions on this site assume normal weather.

South Carolina tide stations

All United States regions

Tide times are guidance for planning, not navigation. See the methodology page for how the data is built.