North Fort Myers, Florida — live current conditions, hourly and 7-day forecasts, NWS alerts, aviation weather, radar and satellite imagery, tides and marine conditions for North Fort Myers, Lee County.
Tides, marine forecast and fishing conditions near North Fort Myers. Nearest NOAA tide station:
Flight conditions near North Fort Myers — sourced from the FAA Aviation Weather Center. Nearest reporting station: locating…
Live animated radar for North Fort Myers and surroundings — RainViewer.
NOAA GOES-16 GEOCOLOR — live animated loop updated every 10 minutes. Shows cloud cover, storm systems and weather patterns across the continental US.
Source: NOAA/NESDIS GOES-East · Public domain · Auto-updates on page reload
North Fort Myers unfurls across a landscape where the sun, a benevolent monarch, presides over sprawling citrus groves and the languid embrace of the Caloosahatchee River. It lies 1.9 miles north-north-west of Fort Myers, FL (from Fort Myers, FL: bearing 345°T), and is situated 8.4 miles north-north-east of Cape Coral. Here, the air itself carries a certain weight, a humid breath scented with saltwater and the faint, sweet perfume of ripening oranges. Ancient live oaks, their branches draped with Spanish moss like weary shawls, stand sentinel over pastures where cattle graze with a slow, deliberate grace. The land, largely flat and fertile, slopes gently toward the water, its edges softened by mangroves that form a verdant, tangled fringe, a living barrier between the cultivated fields and the wide, shimmering expanse of the river. The sky above is a vast canvas, often brushed with the soft pastels of dawn or the fiery hues of sunset, transforming the ordinary into something quiet and profound. This stretch of land, North Fort Myers, has long been a place of cultivation and connection, its history intertwined with the agricultural bounty of Southwest Florida. For generations, the rich soil has yielded not only citrus but also cattle, forming the backbone of a local economy that, while evolving, still honors its agrarian roots. The Caloosahatchee River, a vital artery, has served as both a pathway for trade and a source of sustenance, its waters reflecting a past dotted with fishing villages and small settlements that sprung up along its banks. Today, the echoes of that past mingle with the hum of modern life, a blend of quiet residential neighborhoods and businesses that cater to the enduring appeal of this sun-drenched corner of the state, a place where the rhythm of the tides seems to set the pace for the days.
| Location | North Fort Myers, Lee County, Florida |
| Coordinates | 26.667294°N, 81.880086°W |
| Timezone | Eastern Time (America/New_York) |
| ZIP Code(s) | 33917, 33903, 33918 |
| Area Code | 941 |
| Page generated | June 2026 |
| Weather data | Open-Meteo (open-source), NOAA National Weather Service |