Rinse and repeat: South Florida soaked by another round of tropical moisture through weekend
Miami has recorded more than 14 inches of rain since the start of the month. A flash flood threat is in place for portions of the Gold Coast through Saturday morning.
Strong storms return to South Florida amid historically wet September
A surge of tropical moisture has returned across South Florida. This moisture surge will not only increase the risk for heavy rain and thunderstorms, but will increase the coverage of rain through the end of the week. Through Sunday, an additional widespread 2-3 inches of rain is possible, mainly across the East Coast of Florida.
MIAMI – Seemingly unending rain has returned once again to South Florida with daily afternoon thunderstorms enhanced by tropical moisture persisting through Sunday, part of what has been one of the wettest starts to September for many places along the state's Gold Coast.
Miami has recorded more than 14 inches of rain since the start of the month.
A flash flood threat is in place for portions of the Gold Coast through Saturday morning.
The nonstop precipitation has actually helped ease drought conditions that have plagued much of the Sunshine State this year.
TROPICAL STORM GABRIELLE 'STRUGGLING' OVER ATLANTIC BUT STILL FORECAST TO BECOME HURRICANE
This graphic shows the expected rain through Sunday, Sept. 21, 2025. (FOX Weather / FOX Weather)
According to the FOX Forecast Center, an additional widespread 2-3 inches of rain is possible through Sunday, mainly across Florida's east coast, with localized instances of 3-5 inches possible from storms that repeatedly move over the same area.
NOAA's Weather Prediction Center has issued a Level 1 out of 4 flash flood threat from the Florida Keys to Vero Beach. The threat expands northward through Melbourne on Friday.
This graphic shows the flood threat for Florida through Friday, Sept. 18, 2025. (FOX Weather / FOX Weather)
Miami's 14-plus inches of rain since the start of September ranks as the third-wettest start to the month in 130 years of recordkeeping. The city typically averages 10 inches for all of September.
Fort Lauderdale has recorded more than 9 inches, and Daytona Beach has recorded over 8 inches of rain since the beginning of the month.
This graphic shows Florida rain totals beginning since Sept. 1, 2025. (FOX Weather) This graphic shows rain totals beginning Sept. 1, 2025. (FOX Weather / FOX Weather)
Northern Florida stays out of the rain
It's been a tale of two states in terms of precipitation this month. While South Florida has been swamped, the Florida Panhandle has stayed dry, with Tallahassee not recording a single drop this month – its driest start to September on record.
On the state's Gulf coast, Tampa has only picked up 0.44 inches of rain, its third-driest start to September in history.
Meanwhile, the overall rain has been beneficial for Florida, which now has drought conditions across just 3% of the state, down from nearly 84% of the state as of early May.
This graphic shows the current drought conditions for Florida according to the U.S. Drought Monitor. (FOX Weather / FOX Weather)
Florida's dry season runs from November to June.