textproduct: Honolulu

This forecast discussion was created in the public domain by the National Weather Service. It can be found in its original form here.

SYNOPSIS

Light to moderate east-southeasterly winds will persist through Saturday before taking on a slight northeasterly component on Sunday. This lighter flow will allow for a daily sea and land breeze cycle that will bring clouds and a few showers to leeward and interior areas each afternoon and clearing overnight. Monday through midweek, trade winds will strengthen to moderate to breezy levels, bringing a return to more consistent windward showers.

SHORT TERM UPDATE

IR satellite loop this evening shows scattered low clouds dissipating over the islands as diurnal heating wanes and a more stable airmass continues to fill in. The 00Z RAOB sounding at Hilo indicated a boundary layer capping temperature inversion height of around 6000 feet with dry air dominating in the mid and upper levels. RADAR has been rather quiet this evening with sparse light showers detected. Rainfall totals today were rather unimpressive, topping out at a few hundredths of an inch at select reporting stations, mainly over elevated terrain and interior regions. The trough that had helped enhance shower coverage/intensity on Wednesday and Thursday was positioned too far west of state today to have an impact on our local weather. In the update, rainfall chances and sky cover were decreased tonight to account for current trends. Light to moderate east southeast flow will prevail through Saturday, before backing to a east northeast direction late Saturday into Sunday.

PREV DISCUSSION

Issued at 315 PM HST Fri Jun 19 2026 Light to moderate east-southeast winds continue to fill in across the state this afternoon as a weak surface trough pushes further northwest of Kauai. Surface observations show onshore sea breezes across much of the state, with radar and satellite imagery reflecting this as they show clouds and a few showers building up over leeward and interior areas.

Light to moderate east-southeast winds will continue through Saturday before the approach of a front/trough from the northwest causes the weak background flow to back out of the east-northeast on Sunday. Despite the slight variation in wind direction, the light to moderate background flow will bring a combination of windward and mauka showers along with sea breeze induced leeward and interior showers through the weekend. Overall, shower activity should become limited as drier air filters in. However, a plume of deeper moisture passing just to the south of the Big Island may bring an uptick in showers along the Big Islands windward and southeast facing slopes tonight through Saturday. In addition, dew points are expected to remain in the 70s for many locations across the state through Saturday, maintaining muggy conditions through much of the weekend.

Heading into next week, the subtropical high to the far northeast will gradually regain control, allowing easterly trades to build to moderate to breezy speeds by Wednesday. This will usher in slightly lower dew points, and combined with the breezier trades, some relief from the mugginess. Aloft, model guidance continues to show an upper level low pinching off of a longwave trough to the far north and moving toward the state from the northeast. There still remains some variance between the global models on where this upper level low tracks, but as it nears by midweek, it may enhance trade wind showers as batches of moisture roll through.

AVIATION

Issued at 315 PM HST Fri Jun 19 2026 A rather stable, gentle to moderate easterly trade wind flow will prevail through the weekend. MVFR ceilings will periodically develop along windward slopes, while afternoon sea breezes produce higher ceilings and isolated SHRA over terrain. VFR should dominate at the terminals, and no AIRMETs are in effect.

MARINE

Light to moderate trades will hold for the next couple of days as a weak surface ridge remains northeast of the area and front passes north. Trade winds will begin to increase Monday and trend upward through next week as the front dissipates and the ridge strengthens north of island chain.

A small, medium period south swell will continue to steadily fade into Saturday, allowing surf along south and west-facing shores to drop a notch. A series of small, medium to long period south and southeast swells will fill in Saturday into the first half of next week, which will boost surf heights back near seasonal averages through next week.

Tiny surf will prevail along north-facing shores through most of the coming week as only some limited short-period energy reaches the islands from the north and northwest. Trade winds remain lighter than normal through the weekend, keeping surf along east- facing shores below average. East shore surf will begin to trend up early next week as trade winds increase across and upstream of the region.

HFO WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES

None.


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