Swell Matrix

Area Forecast Discussion

National Weather Service San Diego CA

1152 am PDT Wed jul 1 2026

Synopsis

There will be a slow warming trend for the next week. High temperatures near the coast will warm a few degrees and inland areas will warm around 10 degrees over the next week. High temperatures for the deserts will warm to around average during the weekend and around 5 degrees above average for the middle of next week with the valleys still a few to around 5 degrees below average for early next week. The marine layer will gradually decrease in depth with night and morning low clouds not spreading as far into the valleys by next week.

Discussion

For extreme southwestern California including Orange, San Diego, western Riverside and southwestern San Bernardino counties,

Large-scale, mid-level troughing continues for the western U.S. Through much of the work week, leading to afternoon temperatures as much as 10-15 degrees F below daily averages today. This persistent low pressure aloft is also leading to a deep marine cloud layer at 3500-4500 ft MSL. This morning, clouds reached to cover most of the coastal basin. So far (late this morning), clouds have been slow to clear out of coastal and north areas of the region, but this morning's inversion was shallow enough that clouds will clear for the most part for over-land areas.

As the week progresses, high pressure to the southeast will slowly flatten the trough out, leading to gradually warming temperatures through mid-next week. Despite that, temperatures will linger in the below-average range through Friday region-wide, with the deserts warming into the average to slightly above average zone by this weekend while valley regions are still about 5 degrees below average. By mid- next week the whole region will likely be in the typical temperature range (+/- about 5 degrees from average). This includes temperatures reaching around 100 degrees in the high desert and temperatures approaching or just exceeding 110 degrees in the low desert, resulting in moderate HeatRisk (impactful heat for sensitive communities) for the low deserts even with the seasonability of these temperatures.

Building heights overhead will also squish the marine layer down gradually through next week, with clouds lowering from 4000 feet or so tonight to 2000-3000 ft over the weekend, which means that clouds will move less far inland overnight and likely not linger as long in the mornings. Besides marine layer clouds, though, we're likely to see upper to mid level clouds moving into the region over the weekend, generated from moisture moving in from a distant tropical system which will otherwise likely have little effect on our weather locally. A minority of GFS ensemble members have some spotty light precipitation for late in the weekend and parts of next week, but National Blend of Models chances for precipitation (>= 0.01") are less than 5% for each day during the next seven days.

Aviation

011730z. Coast/Valleys/Foothills, Low clouds with bases 2500- 3500ft MSL are making their retreat towards the coast, having cleared most of the foothills in SD County. Clouds are expected to clear most areas by 18-19Z with few/sct low clouds expected to hang around coastal SD. Low clouds with bases 1500-2000 will redevelop 00- 02Z Thursday beginning in SD and spreading north and spilling into the Inland Empire after 05-06Z.

.Mountains/Deserts, Winds out of the west to southwest increase this afternoon with gusts 20-30kts expected along desert slopes and isolated gusts up to 45kts in mountain passes after 22Z. MOD up/downdrafts and LLWS over and east of the mountains will be possible. Low clouds moving in after 05Z will obscure terrain in clouds/fog on the coastal mountain slopes below 4500 ft MSL through Thursday morning. Otherwise, VFR conditions expected through the period.

Marine

No hazardous marine conditions are expected through Monday.

Watches, Warnings, Advisories

Ca, None. PZ, None.

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