The National Weather Service issues warnings from Malibu to Orange County following two weekend drowning fatalities.
Weather officials have issued coastal flood and high surf warnings from Northern California to Malibu as a volatile mix of heavy ocean swells and peak seasonal tides continues to batter the Southern California shoreline.
The National Weather Service extended beach hazards and flood advisories through midweek, warning that the annual peak tides—popularly known as “king tides”—are producing breaking waves capable of washing onlookers off rocks, flooding beach parking lots, and capsizing small watercraft.

The structural and environmental threats follow two recent shorefront fatalities blamed on the treacherous marine conditions. In Orange County, turbulent waters at Treasure Island Beach swept a 5-year-old girl out to sea on Tuesday as she walked near the shoreline with her family; her body was recovered by authorities two days later. A separate incident in Santa Cruz resulted in the death of one woman and left another in critical condition after both were pulled from the coast by a sudden high tide.
Meteorologists note that the amplified surf is being driven by a powerful south swell intersecting with the year’s highest natural tidal cycles. The convergence has pushed seawater into coastal walkways, damaged historic waterfront cabins at Crystal Cove State Park, and prompted emergency response agencies to distribute sandbags in vulnerable harborfront neighborhoods like Long Beach and Newport Beach.
Weather officials strictly advise the public to stay out of the water, avoid rock jetties entirely, and remain near occupied lifeguard towers if visiting the coast. The hazardous swimming and tidal overflow conditions are expected to peak during late evening high tides through at least late Wednesday.














