The Biggest Tides in the World
From Canada's 52-foot monster to Alaska's rideable bore tide — where the ocean swings hardest, why it happens there, and live charts for every U.S. giant.
The world leaderboard
Bay of Fundy — Burntcoat Head, Nova Scotia, Canada
up to ~52 ft (16 m). The world record. The bay's length makes it resonate almost perfectly with the 12.4-hour tidal rhythm, so each tide amplifies the last — 100+ billion tons of water move in and out twice a day.
Ungava Bay, Quebec, Canada
~50 ft (15+ m). Fundy's near-twin in the Canadian Arctic and, by some surveys, its equal.
Severn Estuary / Bristol Channel, UK
~48 ft (14–15 m). Europe's biggest — the funnel shape squeezes the Atlantic tide into a famous river bore surfers ride upstream.
Bay of Mont-Saint-Michel, France
~46 ft (14 m). The tide crosses miles of flats — legend says it returns 'at the speed of a galloping horse.'
Río Gallegos, Argentina
~43 ft (13 m). South America's largest, at Patagonia's Atlantic edge.
Turnagain Arm, Cook Inlet, Alaska — U.S. #1
~40 ft (12 m). America's giant, with a rideable bore tide. See it live at the nearby stations below.
Ranges are approximate spring-tide maxima from published oceanographic surveys; exact figures vary by measurement point and year.
Watch America's giants live
Every U.S. entry has a live NOAA chart here: Anchorage, AK (26–30 ft, the closest station to Turnagain Arm) and Nikiski, AK in Cook Inlet; Southeast Alaska's Skagway, AK, Juneau, AK and Ketchikan, AK (15–20+ ft); and the East Coast champion Eastport, ME (~18–20 ft), just across the border from the Bay of Fundy itself. For the opposite extreme, compare the Gulf's tiny tides at Galveston, TX or Pensacola, FL — often barely a foot.
Why these places?
Open-ocean tides are only about 2 feet. The giants happen where geography amplifies them: a funnel-shaped bay concentrates the incoming water, a shallowing bottom forces it upward, and resonance — a bay whose natural slosh matches the 12.4-hour lunar rhythm — makes each tide push the next like a hand timing shoves on a playground swing. The Bay of Fundy nails all three. Weather stacks on top everywhere: onshore wind piles water against the coast, and every ~30 hPa drop in barometric pressure lets the sea stand about a foot higher.