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Live Rain Radar for Charleston, South Carolina

← South Carolina, United States

Charleston sees about 1,300 mm (roughly 52 inches) of rain a year and sits directly on the Atlantic coast, making it a regular target for tropical storms and hurricanes moving up from the Caribbean or forming off the Southeast coast. The historic peninsula’s low elevation means even routine heavy rain combined with high tide can produce “sunny day” flooding, and that sensitivity only increases when a tropical system is nearby. Late summer and early fall are the highest-risk months, when warm ocean water fuels storm intensification close to shore. Because Charleston’s flooding risk comes from the combination of rainfall, storm surge, and tidal timing, radar alone doesn’t tell the whole story, but it remains the fastest way to see a storm band or tropical system approaching before official warnings catch up. The area is covered by the National Weather Service’s regional Doppler radar network.

Learn more: Hurricane Season Radar Guide · Open the full Rain Map