Palm Valley, Florida Pollen Count
Palm Valley pollen count and allergy forecast — tree, grass, and ragweed seasons and what’s pollinating now
Palm Valley, FL · Pollen count right now
Grass pollen is Low in Palm Valley today
Grass: Low 2/5Tomorrow: Low
Today’s pollen by type
- TreeOut of season
- GrassLow2/5
- Weed / RagweedOut of season
Palm Valley pollen calendar
Typical peak months for each pollen type in this climate region. The highlighted column is the current month.
How Palm Valley’s pollen count works
The calendar above is tuned to Palm Valley’s warm, humid subtropical Southeast climate, not a national average: tree pollen peaks Feb–Apr, grass Apr–Sep, and ragweed Aug–Nov here. Those windows are why grass pollen is the one in season in Palm Valley right now.
Right now grass pollen leads in Palm Valley at a Low (2/5) level. The species actually in the air today: Grasses. Counts run highest on warm, dry, windy mornings and drop after rain, which washes pollen out of the air — reported on the None / Low / Moderate / High / Very High scale.
Frequently asked
- When is pollen worst in Palm Valley?
- The late-summer ragweed run is the headline in Palm Valley: weed pollen peaks Aug–Nov, the longest and most punishing window of the year here. Tree pollen comes first (Feb–Apr) and grass bridges the gap (Apr–Sep), but it's the ragweed stretch that floors most sufferers. Currently, grass pollen is what's driving counts this month.
- What's in the air in Palm Valley right now?
- Right now grass pollen leads in Palm Valley at a Low (2/5) level. The species actually in the air today: Grasses. On a quiet live day, Palm Valley's seasonal calendar fills in what's typically airborne this time of year.
- Is tree or grass pollen higher in Palm Valley in spring?
- In spring, tree pollen leads in Palm Valley — trees pollinate Feb–Apr, ahead of grass (Apr–Sep). The handoff is the tail of the tree window: tree counts taper as grass climbs, so an early-spring flare is more likely tree pollen and a late-spring one more likely grass.
- What makes Palm Valley's pollen season distinctive?
- Palm Valley sits in the warm, humid subtropical Southeast zone, which means an unusually long, overlapping season — the warm climate stretches grass across much of the year and pushes ragweed deep into autumn. That shapes when symptoms hit and which allergen to watch.
- How do I reduce pollen exposure in Palm Valley?
- Through Palm Valley's peak windows (tree Feb–Apr, grass Apr–Sep, ragweed Aug–Nov), keep windows shut and run AC on recirculate; counts run highest on dry, warm, windy mornings, so push outdoor activity to late afternoon or just after rain, which clears pollen from the air. A HEPA purifier indoors, a saline rinse after being outside, showering before bed, and starting antihistamines a week or two before your worst local window all measurably cut symptoms.
- What pollen index counts as high?
- Pollen is reported on a categorical scale — None, Low, Moderate, High, and Very High. "High" and above means most allergy sufferers notice symptoms even with brief outdoor exposure, and sensitized people should limit time outside and pre-medicate. "Low" to "Moderate" usually only affects highly sensitive individuals.
More for Palm Valley
See the full Palm Valley, FL weather forecast — hour-by-hour outlook, NOAA radar, satellite, and air quality.
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