MetEye MetEye 7-day wind, wave, rain, weather forecast maps for boating, farming Click anywhere for detailed forecasts for all locations across Australia Bureau of Meteorology
MetEye: A whole new way to view your local weather MetEye provides a whole new way to view your local weather, giving the latest weather and forecasts out to 7 days ahead, for any location The Local Weather pages give an overview of local weather for your place, letting you see current conditions and forecasts summarised on one page
Overview - About MetEye - Bureau of Meteorology Forecasts in MetEye are fine-tuned by Bureau forecasters to best represent expected weather Forecasts are routinely updated twice a day Watch our introductory MetEye video and MetEye for boating video
MetEye TM - Bureau of Meteorology The MetEye system is great for a quick overview, but if you delve deeper you’ll be rewarded with highly detailed forecast information out to seven days for most States
Forecast weather - About MetEye - Bureau of Meteorology MetEye displays different layers from the Australian Digital Forecast Database (ADFD) The ADFD is a database of official weather forecast elements produced by the Bureau of Meteorology, such as temperature, rainfall and significant weather types, presented in a gridded format
Observations for Perth - Bureau of Meteorology Provides access to 31 85°S, 115 56°E weather forecasts, warnings, observations and radar and satellite imagery provided by the Bureau of Meteorology
Latest Weather (Observations) - About MetEye - Bureau of Meteorology All latest weather and cloud cover (satellite) data layers are available for the whole of Australia The latest rain radar coverage is restricted to those areas which have a radar The optimal coverage map shows the areas covered
Explore our new rain radar and map viewer Two of the most popular features on our current website are radar images and MetEye On our new website we combine these into one customisable, mobile-friendly weather map
MetEye: now available across all of Australia The addition of Northern Territory onto the Bureau of Meteorology’s MetEye mapping tool last week marks the end of a five-year mission to deliver seven-day weather forecasts to all Australians