Weather Forecast

Maui Weather Forecast for May 14, 2024

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Photo Credit: Tyler Rooke

West Side

Rest Of Today: Mostly cloudy. Isolated showers in the morning, then showers likely in the afternoon. Highs 77 to 85. Light winds. Chance of rain 70 percent.

Tonight: Mostly cloudy with scattered showers. Lows 66 to 72. South winds up to 10 mph increasing to 10 to 15 mph after midnight. Chance of rain 50 percent.

Wednesday: Partly sunny with scattered showers. Highs 78 to 85. South winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 50 percent.

South Side

Rest Of Today: Partly sunny. Showers likely in the afternoon. Highs around 84. Light winds. Chance of rain 60 percent.

Tonight: Mostly cloudy with scattered showers in the evening, then partly cloudy with isolated showers after midnight. Lows 66 to 73. Light winds. Chance of rain 40 percent.

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Wednesday: Partly sunny with scattered showers. Highs around 84. South winds around 10 mph. Chance of rain 40 percent.

North Shore

Rest Of Today: Partly sunny in the morning, then cloudy with occasional showers in the afternoon. Highs around 79 near the shore to around 66 near 5000 feet. Southeast winds up to 10 mph. Chance of rain 90 percent.

Tonight: Mostly cloudy with showers likely in the evening, then partly cloudy with scattered showers after midnight. Lows 67 to 72 near the shore to 48 to 54 near 5000 feet. Light winds becoming south up to 10 mph after midnight. Chance of rain 70 percent.

Wednesday: Mostly cloudy with scattered showers. Highs around 80 near the shore to around 67 near 5000 feet. South winds up to 10 mph. Chance of rain 50 percent.

Central Maui

Rest Of Today: Partly sunny. Showers likely in the afternoon. Highs 80 to 85. Light winds. Chance of rain 70 percent.

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Tonight: Mostly cloudy with scattered showers in the evening, then partly cloudy with isolated showers after midnight. Lows around 67. Light winds. Chance of rain 40 percent.

Wednesday: Partly sunny with scattered showers. Highs 81 to 86. South winds around 10 mph. Chance of rain 50 percent.

Upcountry

Rest Of Today: Partly sunny in the morning, then cloudy with occasional showers in the afternoon. Highs 57 to 67. Southwest winds up to 10 mph. Chance of rain 90 percent.

Tonight: Mostly cloudy with showers likely in the evening, then partly cloudy with scattered showers after midnight. Lows around 48 at the visitor center to around 41 at the summit. Southwest winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 70 percent.

Wednesday: Breezy. Partly sunny with scattered showers. Highs around 62 at the visitor center to around 64 at the summit. Southwest winds 10 to 20 mph. Chance of rain 50 percent.

East Maui

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Rest Of Today: Partly sunny in the morning, then cloudy with occasional showers in the afternoon. Highs around 79 near the shore to around 66 near 5000 feet. Southeast winds up to 10 mph. Chance of rain 90 percent.

Tonight: Mostly cloudy with showers likely in the evening, then partly cloudy with scattered showers after midnight. Lows 67 to 72 near the shore to 48 to 54 near 5000 feet. Light winds becoming south up to 10 mph after midnight. Chance of rain 70 percent.

Wednesday: Mostly cloudy with scattered showers. Highs around 80 near the shore to around 67 near 5000 feet. South winds up to 10 mph. Chance of rain 50 percent.

Lanai City

Rest Of Today: Cloudy. Occasional showers in the morning, then showers likely in the afternoon. Highs 70 to 77. Light winds. Chance of rain 90 percent.

Tonight: Mostly cloudy. Showers likely in the evening, then scattered showers after midnight. Lows around 64. South winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 70 percent.

Wednesday: Mostly cloudy with scattered showers. Highs 69 to 78. South winds around 15 mph. Chance of rain 50 percent.

Kaunakakai

Rest Of Today: Mostly cloudy. Showers likely in the morning, then occasional showers in the afternoon. Highs 66 to 85. Light winds becoming southwest up to 10 mph in the afternoon. Chance of rain 80 percent.

Tonight: Mostly cloudy with showers likely. Lows 57 to 73. South winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 70 percent.

Wednesday: Breezy. Mostly cloudy with occasional showers. Highs 66 to 86. South winds 10 to 20 mph. Chance of rain 80 percent.

Detailed Forecast

Synopsis

A lingering upper level low northeast of the islands is keeping the local airmass relatively moist and unstable. Spotty, hit-or- miss heavy downpours will continue to be possible over the next couple of days. A late season kona low will develop several hundred miles north of the islands Tuesday night, and then meander around well northwest of the islands the rest of the week. The kona low will turn our winds southerly as early as Tuesday, and eventually tap into deep tropical moisture lurking south of the islands. This will cause a slow-moving band of showers, some heavy, and a few embedded thunderstorms over some parts of the state for the second half of the week. Excessive rainfall and flash flooding will continue to be a concern.

Discussion

Water vapor imagery continues to show an upper level low located approximately 350 mi NE of Honolulu. This feature, along with a relatively large area of relatively moist air (TPW 1.6-1.7 in the predawn balloon soundings) is helping to enhance showers around the islands. Winds at the surface are mostly light land breezes early this morning but become S-SE in the lower levels just off the surface, which is pulling showers from the downwind Big Island convergence zone northward Oahu and Maui county.
The various convection-allowing-models all have their own ideas about the details of the next couple of days, but the overall theme seems to be that the general unsettled weather pattern will continue through Wed, with clouds and showers being drawn up northward over the smaller islands, as well as the possibility for some afternoon convective development over the interiors and north shores (where enough morning sunshine might allow).
The very unusual weather pattern for mid-May continues for latter half of the week. Another strong shortwave digs into the mean longwave trough position near the islands to generate a kona low about 500 mi N of Kauai (near 30N 160W) Tue night. This low is then forecast to strengthen and meander around several hundred miles NW of the islands for the rest of this week. A large reservoir of deep, moist, tropical air with TPW of greater than 2 inches is lurking about 400 mi or so SW of the islands, and the models focus some of this moisture northward along a developing convergence band over Oahu and Maui county Wed night. After that, the models slowly take the very moist convergence band slowly westward, with another surge of very high TPW air riding up the boundary as we approach the weekend.
Although the model QPFs are not incredibly impressive, this general pattern, with a relatively slow moving band of moisture convergence over the islands could lead to locally excessive rainfall. Flash flooding will be a concern, especially given the wet antecedent conditions from recent heavy rainfall. Have nudged QPF toward the highest NBM percentile values for Wed night into Thu, where confidence is highest for heavy rain timing and placement in the near term.
As the band of convergence shifts westward toward the weekend, even more copious moisture (TPW near or possibly even in excess of 2 inches) will be pulled northward toward Kauai and Oahu. A shortwave aloft rotating around the kona low and favorable jet diffluence along may help to enhance rainfall even more. This scenario is less confident, however, since the band may slow to a crawl and intensify mostly west of the Garden Isle over the weekend. Also, there is the possibility for one or more thunderstorm complexes to develop SW of the islands that might rob us of some moisture and instability. Nevertheless, we want to stress that this is the type of pattern that can lead to some pretty serious flooding. We will continue to monitor the situation and expect that details will become more clear as we get closer.
It is worth noting that as all the action shifts west, the Big Island and perhaps Maui county will be under increasing subsidence and warming aloft, with some dry air possibly trying to make inroads from the E, and a mid- level ridge located E of the islands. So the weather there by the weekend may end up being drier, with locally breezy E or ESE winds thanks to a nearly stationary surface high far to the NE of the Big Island.

Aviation

VFR prevails this morning as land breezes have scoured out low clouds and convective debris from yesterday afternoon and evening lingers as sct-bkn cigs around 10kft. Showers have largely refocused offshore where they will remain for the remainder of the early morning, save for a few locales along the immediate coast, before refocusing over island interiors again late this morning into this afternoon. Light to moderate southeasterlies will veer to southerly during this time.
No AIRMETs in effect.

Marine

Light to moderate east southeast to south winds will persist today into Wednesday as an area of low pressure develops 450 nm north of the state. A frontal boundary extending from the low will move over the western islands early evening Wednesday then stall near or over the central islands Thursday. The front will then weaken into a trough and shift westward Friday. Scattered heavy showers are possible through the week with the threat of thunderstorms developing Wednesday and persisting into the weekend.
A series of overlapping, long-period south swells will begin to fill in this afternoon, keeping surf along south facing shores near to just below average. A second set of southerly swells will fill in late Wednesday and could bring above average surf Thursday. Surf should remain elevated through the weekend.
A small, medium-period northwest swell will slowly decline today. A new small, medium period north-northwest swell will fill in later today, and peak Wednesday. As the low mentioned above develops near Hawaii, this source may send a moderate, short period northwest swell Wednesday night, peaking near to just below advisory levels Thursday into Friday. Model guidance tends to under-forecast swell heights with sources developing at a close proximity. Therefore, there is a potential for surf to reach High Surf Advisory criteria and will continue to monitor all available guidance.
West facing shores will see a bump in surf through the week due to the overlapping northwest and south swells wrapping into some exposed areas. Surf along east facing shores will remain well below normal levels through the weekend.

HFO Watches/Warnings/Advisories

Flood Watch from Wednesday morning through Friday evening for all Hawaii islands,

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Data Courtesy of NOAA.gov

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