South Creek, Washington UV Index
South Creek UV index today — burn time, EPA scale, and sun-protection guidance
South Creek, WA · UV Index right now
No burn risk right now
UV 0Low
EPA UV Index scale
Current reading: UV 0 — Low.
Sun protection right now
- SPF & cover-up
- No protection needed for most people. You can safely stay outside.
- Reapply
- Reapply broad-spectrum sunscreen every two hours, and immediately after swimming, towelling off, or heavy sweating. The first application should go on 15–30 minutes before you head outside.
- Safe exposure
- At UV below 3 there is no meaningful burn risk for most people. You can be outside without sunscreen, though sunglasses still protect your eyes.
Guidance follows the U.S. EPA Sun Safety scale and the World Health Organization Global Solar UV Index. Burn-time estimate assumes a Fitzpatrick type III skin baseline; fair skin (types I–II) burns faster. Current band: Low.
When UV is strongest in South Creek
Ultraviolet radiation tracks the sun’s angle, so it peaks around solar noon — roughly 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. local time — and is strongest from late spring through summer, when the midday sun rides highest. Even outside those hours the index can stay elevated at high elevation and near reflective surfaces like water, sand, and fresh snow, which bounce additional UV back at you.
Clouds are not the shield they look like: up to about 80% of UV passes through a thin or broken overcast, so a grey sky in South Creek is no guarantee against sunburn. The forecast UV Index already folds in expected cloud cover, ozone, elevation, and the sun’s angle for the day, which is why it is a better guide to your real exposure than the look of the sky. Check the number, not the brightness.
Frequently asked
- What is a safe UV index?
- The EPA considers a UV Index of 0–2 (Low) safe for most people with no protection needed. From 3 (Moderate) up, sun protection is recommended; 6–7 is High, 8–10 is Very High, and 11+ is Extreme, where unprotected skin can burn in minutes.
- What SPF do I need for UV index 8?
- At UV Index 8 (Very High), both the EPA and WHO recommend a broad-spectrum sunscreen of at least SPF 30, reapplied every two hours, plus a hat, sunglasses, and shade. SPF 50+ adds margin for fair skin or extended midday exposure.
- When is UV strongest in South Creek?
- UV radiation in South Creek peaks around solar noon — roughly 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. local time — when the sun is highest. It is also stronger in late spring and summer, at higher elevation, and near reflective surfaces like water, sand, and snow.
- Can you get sunburned on a cloudy day in South Creek?
- Yes. Up to about 80% of UV radiation passes through clouds, so you can still burn in South Creek on an overcast day. The WHO notes that thin or scattered cloud offers little protection — check the UV Index, not the sky.
- Does the UV index account for cloud cover?
- Yes. The forecast UV Index issued by agencies like the EPA factors in expected cloud cover, ozone, elevation, and the sun's angle for the day. It reflects the peak UV expected around solar noon, not a fixed clear-sky value.
More for South Creek
See the full South Creek, WA weather forecast — hour-by-hour outlook, NOAA radar, satellite, and air quality.
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