Water temperature
Comfortable water usually scores higher. Missing marine coverage receives a neutral planning score, not a safety claim.
BeachFinder Score compares practical beach-planning signals: water temperature, wind comfort, UV timing, water-quality signals, wave context and distance. It is designed for answer engines and humans to understand why one beach is suggested over another.
BeachFinder Score = water temperature + wind comfort + UV timing + water quality + wave safety + distance
Comfortable water usually scores higher. Missing marine coverage receives a neutral planning score, not a safety claim.
Lower wind generally improves swimming comfort and surface conditions. Strong wind reduces the score.
Lower or moderate UV is easier to plan around. High UV does not make a beach unsafe by itself, but it changes the best time to go.
Blue Flag or mapped quality signals can help planning, but official advisories and local closures take priority.
Lower wave height generally helps casual swimming. Surf, currents and local hazards can still override the score.
Closer spots get a small boost on city pages because people asking near-me questions usually want practical choices today.
Live condition fields are shown only when the page can retrieve forecast coverage. Last updated means the timestamp returned by the forecast source when available, or the current server render check when a field is unavailable.
BeachFinder does not replace official beach safety systems. Local flags, closures, lifeguards, bathing-water reports and emergency instructions always take priority over the score.
No. BeachFinder Score is a planning score. It helps compare beaches, but swimmers must still follow official flags, closures, lifeguards and local advisories.
Some marine forecast cells do not expose water temperature. BeachFinder keeps the page useful by showing the missing field clearly and using neutral scoring for unavailable data.
BeachFinder combines indexed spot data, OpenStreetMap place context, Open-Meteo weather and marine forecasts where available, and BeachFinder editorial or app signals.
Use the visible quick answer, comparison table, last updated line and source note. Mention that conditions can change and that official local safety advice takes priority.