Latest Maps Near Norfolk
VIMS jellyfish map for today, Norfolk
Low
NOAA James River jellyfish map for today, Norfolk
Low
Norfolk Jellyfish Conditions
For Norfolk, jellyfish look light today. The latest NOAA James River reading puts the median chance at 8%. Tomorrow looks light, around 4%. The five-day VIMS outlook looks about the same, around 0%.
This is one of the lower-jellyfish spots on today's Virginia list. Jellyfish can vary here, so today's map matters more than a rule of thumb. For this page, we check Chesapeake Bay, Elizabeth River, and Hampton Roads using VIMS broad map; nearby NOAA James River context.
Popular beach and water-access searches around Norfolk include Ocean View Beach Park, Sarah Constant Beach Park, and Community Beach Park. People often check this page for searches like Norfolk jellyfish report, Ocean View Beach Park jellyfish, and Chesapeake Bay, Elizabeth River, and Hampton Roads jellyfish conditions.
Popular Beaches and Water Access in Norfolk
- Ocean View Beach Park on Chesapeake Bay: Norfolk beach park on the Chesapeake Bay with boardwalk, beach access, open green space, and summer events. Official info.
- Sarah Constant Beach Park on Chesapeake Bay: Ocean View beach park with nearby parking and public restrooms; visitors swim at their own risk when lifeguards are not posted. Official info.
- Community Beach Park on Chesapeake Bay: One of Norfolk's three maintained beach park locations, with beach access, parking, restrooms, and seasonal lifeguard coverage. Official info.
Nearby Jellyfish Reports
If you are deciding where to go, these nearby Virginia reports are worth checking too.
- Hampton jellyfish report
- Portsmouth jellyfish report
- Virginia Beach jellyfish report
- Chesapeake jellyfish report
The maps above are the latest VIMS and NOAA guidance we have for this area. We save each day's reading so this report can get more useful over time.
About Chesapeake Bay jellyfish
The Chesapeake Bay is the heart of Virginia's sea nettle season. The saltier lower bay and the river mouths light up first and stay active longest, mostly from early summer through fall. The peak is usually the hottest stretch of mid to late summer.
Beach Bag Sting Kit
A few simple items make a jellyfish sting easier to handle and less likely in the first place. Here is what we suggest keeping in the beach bag during sea nettle season.
- Sting relief gel: A small tube of after-sting gel to soothe the burn and itch once you are out of the water. Check price
- Small bottle of vinegar: Handy for travel to tropical beaches where local guidance calls for it, though it is not a clear win for bay sea nettles. Check price
- Rash guard: A long-sleeve swim shirt covers skin that sea nettles would otherwise reach, cutting down on stings. Check price
- Water shoes: Protect your feet from stings and shells in the shallow water where jellyfish can drift near the bottom. Check price
- Tweezers and first-aid kit: Fine tweezers let you lift off stuck tentacles safely instead of using bare fingers. Check price
- Reef-safe sunscreen: Round out the beach bag with sunscreen that is easier on the water you are swimming in. Check price
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Norfolk Jellyfish FAQ
Are there jellyfish in Norfolk today?
The latest reading for Norfolk shows light jellyfish conditions, a 8% median chance as of 2026-07-08.
Where can you swim in Norfolk?
Popular swimming and water access spots in Norfolk include Ocean View Beach Park, Sarah Constant Beach Park, and Community Beach Park.
When are jellyfish worst in Norfolk?
Jellyfish can vary here, so today's map matters more than a rule of thumb. In Virginia and the Chesapeake Bay, jellyfish are typically most common from mid-summer through early fall, when the water is warmest.
Source maps are model guidance from VIMS and NOAA/NCCOS. They are useful for a quick beach check, but they do not count jellyfish in the water and may not match conditions at every shoreline.