San Francisco Temperature Advisory Extended to 7 PM Saturday for World Cup
The san francisco temperature forecast includes an 88-degree high for Saturday’s World Cup action in Santa Clara, as a heat advisory for the East Bay Inland areas and Santa Clara Valley, including San Jose, was extended to 7 PM Saturday. The advisory now covers the match window, giving spectators and nearby residents a clearer timeline for the hottest part of the day.
That same stretch of weather comes with a separate coastal advisory from 7 PM Saturday until 3 AM Tuesday and a beach hazard statement from 3 AM Sunday to 3 AM Wednesday. The forecast also calls for waves of 4 to 6 feet, while low-lying parking lots, docks and coastal roads near the San Francisco Bay shoreline are expected to see minor flooding nightly through the middle of next week.
Santa Clara match window
The heat advisory now runs through 7 PM Saturday for the East Bay Inland areas and Santa Clara Valley, including San Jose. The forecast high for the World Cup action in Santa Clara is 88 degrees, while inland parts of the region are expected to reach the mid 90s on Saturday.
Sunday should turn cooler than Saturday, but Livermore is still forecast to reach 92. For people heading to Santa Clara, the practical change is the timing: the advisory stays in place through the match period, so the warmest conditions arrive before the evening cutoff.
Bay shoreline tides
Near the San Francisco Bay shoreline, tides are expected to rise up to 2 feet higher than normal, with saltwater flooding possible on roads during the late night hours. The highest tide of the event is expected Sunday night around 11:10 PM, when it should peak at a near-record 1.9 to 2.0 feet above normal.
The event is on track to be the highest summer tide ever recorded in the Bay Area. Forecast language points to a rare combination of a New Moon and the moon’s closest approach to Earth, along with warmer ocean water and rising sea levels contributing to the surge.
Late-night flood risk
The most immediate concern falls on low-lying parking lots, docks and coastal roads, which are expected to see minor flooding nightly through the middle of next week. The coastal advisory begins Saturday evening and stays in effect until early Tuesday, then the beach hazard statement continues through early Wednesday as waves remain elevated.
For anyone traveling near the shoreline, the key shift is not just the heat on Saturday. It is the overlap of warm inland conditions, higher tides and hazardous surf across the same weekend.