Planning Dive Trips Around Japan's Typhoon & Rainy Season — Monthly Data Guide

2026-03-11

"Should I Avoid Typhoon Season and the Rainy Season?" — Data Answers

Common advice says to avoid Japan's rainy season and typhoon season for diving. But 46,000 real observations tell a different story:

  • Rainy season (Jun–Jul): Virtually no impact on visibility. Yonaguni June average: 24.4m — essentially the same as May (24.2m).
  • Post-typhoon: Lowest point is 2–4 days after passage.Recovery takes about 1 week.Exception: Yonaguni often improves after typhoons.

Monthly Risk Calendar

MonthTyphoonRainy SeasonRiskDiving Assessment
JanNoneNone◎ BestBest. Zero weather risk. Izu winter peak clarity.
FebNoneNone◎ BestExcellent. Winter clarity at its best.
MarNoneNone○ GoodGood. No weather risk, but Izu spring bloom starting.
AprNoneNone○ GoodGood. Okinawa best season. Izu spring bloom.
MayRare (1–2)None (Okinawa only)○ GoodGood. GW period. Okinawa rainy but visibility unaffected.
JunLow (2–3)Honshu rainy season (from early Jun)○ GoodGood despite myth. Rainy season doesn't reduce visibility. Low typhoon risk.
JulModerate (3–4)Rainy season ends (late Jul)△ CautionCaution. Increasing typhoon risk. Okinawa summer clarity begins.
AugHigh (4–5)None▲ High RiskHigh typhoon risk. Peak clarity (Yonaguni 26.5m) but 1-week recovery after hits.
SepPeak (5–6)None✕ Peak RiskHighest risk. But also Japan's clearest month (Yonaguni 27.3m). Target early September.
OctModerate–High (3–4)None▲ High RiskStill some typhoon risk. Okinawa still excellent (26.8m). Late October more stable.
NovLow (1)None○ GoodGood. Typhoon risk sharply drops. Izu recovering, Okinawa stable.
DecNoneNone◎ BestExcellent. Zero typhoon/rain risk. Izu winter clarity begins.

Is Rainy Season Really Fine for Diving?

The data clearly says yes. Rainfall barely affects open-water visibility because:

  • Dive sites are typically on rocky reefs or offshore — land runoff doesn't reach them
  • Visibility is driven by plankton density and swell conditions, not rainfall
  • Data: IOP June = 11.3m vs May = 10.6m (June is actually higher)

The real rainy-season risk is trip cancellation from strong winds and rain, not poor underwater visibility. Boat cancellations are actually less frequent in rainy season than during post-typhoon typhoon season.

Post-Typhoon Visibility Recovery

Time After TyphoonAvg Change vs. Pre-Typhoon
Typhoon day-3.2m
Day +1-4.1m
Day +3-3.8m
Day +5-2.1m
Day +7 (1 week)-0.8m
Day +10-0.3m

Lowest point: 1–3 days post-typhoon (avg −4.1m). Recovery to within −0.8m by day 7; essentially normal by day 10. Strategy: book trips 7–10 days after a typhoon passage.

Best Strategies

Option 1: Early September in Okinawa

Peak typhoon season, but early September has relatively typhoon-free windows. Yonaguni September average: 27.3m — Japan's annual peak. Best risk/reward ratio.

Option 2: Late October – November in Okinawa

Typhoon risk drops sharply in November (~1 per year average). Yonaguni still at 24.4m. Much lower cancellation risk with still-excellent clarity.

Option 3: January–February in Izu

Zero typhoon and rainy season risk. Izu's annual clarity peak (IOP 18.6m, Ito 18.8m). Cold water (~16°C) requires drysuit.

Option 4: April–May in Okinawa (Golden Week)

Pre-typhoon season, low weather risk. Ishigaki April–May is its clearest period (21–22m). Manta season. 1–2 average typhoons, so not zero risk.

Summary

  • Rainy season (Jun–Jul) does NOT reduce visibility — the myth is debunked by data
  • Peak typhoon risk: September (5–6 avg). Lowest: December–February (zero)
  • Post-typhoon recovery: ~1 week — target 7–10 days after passage
  • Yonaguni often improves after typhoons — a counterintuitive strategy for the bold
  • Best risk/clarity balance: early September Okinawa, November Okinawa, or Jan–Feb Izu

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