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Gran Canaria Airport turbulence forecast

Gran Canaria, Spain

Standard profile airport

LPA (Gran Canaria, Spain) sits at 27.93°N, 15.39°W, 78 ft elevation — coastal.

Elevation
Sea level
78 ft
Latitude band
Subtropical
27.9° N
Jet stream
Seasonal — strongest in winter
Convective risk
Monsoon-driven

About LPA

Major airport serving Gran Canaria, Spain.

Climate
Subtropical coastal — mild winters, humid summers
Geography
Coastal — marine-influenced airmass

What to expect on departures

Computed from LPA's geography and climate

The jet stream meanders across this latitude seasonally — LPA sees its strongest CAT exposure in December–February, when the polar jet pushes equatorward and routes intersect it more often. June-onwards departures climb into cleaner upper-level flow. Monsoon months pump moisture and instability into the local airmass — expect significantly more convective turbulence during the wet season at LPA, with much smoother cruise during dry-season operations. LPA's coastal position means departures often transit from the cool marine boundary layer into warmer continental air within minutes of takeoff — a brief but reliable bumpy transition on warm-season afternoons when the sea breeze is set up.

Climbout notes

Climbout typically transitions from cool marine air to warmer continental air — a brief bumpy layer near the boundary is normal on summer afternoons.

Seasonal pattern

Winter (December–February) brings the strongest jet-stream activity — that's when long-haul departures most often log clear-air turbulence at cruise. Summer (June–August) is peak thunderstorm season — convective turbulence is the dominant warm-season risk.

Peak turbulence
Monsoon months (varies by hemisphere)
Typically calmest
Dry season

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LPA turbulence FAQ

Is turbulence common on flights from LPA?

Gran Canaria Airport is best described as a standard profile airport. The jet stream meanders across this latitude seasonally — LPA sees its strongest CAT exposure in December–February, when the polar jet pushes equatorward and routes intersect it more often.

When is turbulence worst for Gran Canaria flights?

Winter (December–February) brings the strongest jet-stream activity — that's when long-haul departures most often log clear-air turbulence at cruise. Peak turbulence window: Monsoon months (varies by hemisphere). Typically calmest: Dry season.

How accurate are Turbcast forecasts?

We combine live NOAA Aviation Weather Center data (PIREPs, SIGMETs, AIRMETs) with physics-based Ellrod and Richardson-number calculations derived from Open-Meteo pressure-level wind and temperature data. If a source is unavailable for a waypoint we show an em dash rather than invent a number.

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