Barometric Pressure & Diving Visibility: Does a Cold Front Bring Clear Water?

2026-03-11

Among divers, there's a common belief: "After a low-pressure system passes, the water clears up" or "High pressure means good visibility." Is this true? We matched 46,000+ real visibility observations against barometric pressure readings to find out.

The answer: "High pressure = clear water" reverses depending on the season. In winter, the "normal pressure zone" (1010–1019 hPa) after a front passes yields the highest visibility (18.0m). In spring through autumn, high pressure days are actually associated with lower visibility.

Average Visibility by Pressure Band × Season

Winter (Dec–Feb)

Pressure BandAvg VisibilityObservations
Low (<1010)15.4m2,813
Normal (1010–1019)18m4,292
High (1020+)15.9m2,241

Spring (Mar–May)

Pressure BandAvg VisibilityObservations
Low (<1010)14.2m4,871
Normal (1010–1019)13.8m4,566
High (1020+)12m1,064

Summer (Jun–Aug)

Pressure BandAvg VisibilityObservations
Low (<1010)14.8m9,515
Normal (1010–1019)13.3m4,067
High (1020+)15m3

Autumn (Sep–Nov)

Pressure BandAvg VisibilityObservations
Low (<1010)15m4,530
Normal (1010–1019)14.4m6,383
High (1020+)13m1,761

The Paradox: Why High Pressure Can Mean Worse Visibility

The most striking result is the winter pattern:

  • Low pressure (<1010 hPa): 15.4m
  • Normal (1010–1019 hPa): 18.0m ← highest
  • High pressure (1020+ hPa): 15.9m

Why is the "normal zone" the clearest? The key is the lag between frontal passage and ocean response. When a winter cold front clears and pressure recovers to 1010–1019 hPa: (1) waves have calmed, (2) suspended particles settle out, (3) fresh offshore water flows in. Under strong high pressure (1020+ hPa), calm winds can actually allow a thin layer of surface turbidity to accumulate.

Summer: The Opposite Pattern

Summer data shows low-pressure days averaging 14.8m vs normal-pressure days at 13.3m. This likely reflects selection bias — divers only go out during low-pressure periods when conditions are already workable. High pressure (1020+ hPa) in Japanese summer is extremely rare (only 3 data points), making summer high-pressure statistics unreliable.

Sites Most Affected by Pressure

SiteHigh PressureLow PressureDifference
奄美大島20.9m17.6m+3.3m
白崎12.9m10.8m+2.2m
伊豆海洋公園17.1m14.9m+2.2m
雲見13m11.2m+1.8m
黄金崎17m15.4m+1.7m
柏島15m13.7m+1.4m
串本13.9m13.4m+0.5m
大瀬崎湾内8.8m8.5m+0.3m

Practical Takeaways

  • Winter diving in Izu/Kanto: 2–3 days after a cold front passes, when pressure stabilizes at 1010–1019 hPa, is optimal timing
  • Summer visibility: Pressure matters little — focus on "3-day rainfall < 5mm" and "wave height < 1m" instead
  • Amami and IOP: These sites benefit most from high pressure (+3.3m and +2.2m respectively)

Bottom line: barometric pressure is a supplementary signal for visibility prediction. Wave height, recent rainfall, and season are stronger predictors — as confirmed by our AI model's feature importance analysis.

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