Is Coastal Bioluminescent Red Tide (San Diego) happening right now?

As of Jun 17, 2026, 4:21 PM, peak season now, through ~December 15. Earth Exhibit tracks the live conditions and flags it the moment it is on.

San Diego's bioluminescence has two faces. By day, a heavy bloom can tint the water a murky rust-brown, the "red tide," just a nickname for a dense plankton bloom (it isn't always literally red). By night, the very same plankton set the surf on fire: a wave curls, breaks, and for a half-second the whole face of it glows electric, chemical blue, then the foam flares as it slides up the sand and your footprints glow behind you. Rust-red by day, electric-blue by night: one organism, two completely different shows.

What's actually glowing

The light comes from a single-celled dinoflagellate, Lingulodinium polyedra, that blooms in dense numbers near shore. Each cell carries the same luciferin–luciferase chemistry that powers a firefly, but here it's triggered mechanically: when turbulence deforms the cell (a breaking wave, a kicked-up splash, a hand dragged through the shallows), it fires a brief flash of blue-green light around 470 nanometers. One cell is invisible. Millions firing at once turn a breaking wave into a wall of light.

Worth knowing: not every red tide glows, and a glowing bloom can fade in a matter of days, which is exactly why it's so hard to plan around.

Why it's so unpredictable

A San Diego bloom needs several things to line up: warm, stratified water, a pulse of nutrients (from upwelling or runoff), and calm conditions that let the cells concentrate near the surf. When those align, a bloom can run for days to weeks. The famous 2020 event, studied by the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, was one of the longest on record. Other years bring little or nothing. There is no reliable annual date; the honest answer is always "watch the conditions."

That's the gap Earth Exhibit is built to close. Rather than promise a date, it reads the live conditions (season, water, wind, darkness, moon) and watches for the actual evidence of a bloom, so "it's happening" means it's actually happening.

Where to see it

When a bloom is on, these San Diego shorelines give the most reliable look at the surf line:

SpotWhy
La Jolla Shores / La Jolla CoveBroad, accessible beach; the most consistent viewing.
Scripps Pier shorelineDark stretch near the research pier; a classic vantage.
Mission Beach / Belmont ParkLong open oceanfront; easy access.
Torrey Pines State BeachDarker skies to the north, away from city light.
Silver Strand, CoronadoSouth-bay option with wide, quiet sand.

How to actually catch it

This is the short version

This page shows a taste. The app has the full list of where to see this, the exact timing, and live conditions for 1,000+ natural phenomena worldwide, so you know the moment one is genuinely worth the trip.