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Last update: 23:00, 5 Jun 2026
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Live rain radar for Ratchaburi, updated every 5 min. See Mae Klong basin storms before they flood Damnoen Saduak or close your orchard access roads. Free.
Rain in Ratchaburi follows the SW monsoon pattern that defines most of central Thailand. Wet season runs May–October, when afternoon convective storms develop with little warning and can deliver intense rainfall in short bursts. The key risk is not just getting wet — it's the knock-on effects: Mae Klong River flooding, flash floods on Highway 4, agricultural disruption to orchards and floating markets. Local residents have learned to check real-time conditions before making decisions, because a regional forecast from the morning is useless when a cell is forming 20km away.
Ratchaburi is a province where tourists visiting Damnoen Saduak and farmers in the Mae Klong basin The difference between knowing rain is 15 minutes away versus learning about it when you're already in it is the difference between a managed disruption and a genuine problem.
RainViewer shows you exactly which part of Ratchaburi is in the rain right now — not a provincial average, but street-level precision updated every 5 minutes.
RainViewer combines signals from radar stations across the region to give Ratchaburi a single, continuous map. From here, you can also track rain developing in Nakhon Pathom, Kanchanaburi, Samut Songkhram — useful if you're driving Highway 4 between Bangkok and the south or visiting the famous floating market.
Afternoon and evening storms drive the season. Peak intensity typically falls in August–September for most of Thailand, with the key variation being how terrain shapes local delivery. Cells can be intense and short-lived or slow-moving and sustained.
These are the months where forecast reliability drops most sharply. May often brings the first events of the season before residents have recalibrated from the dry months. October is when the monsoon exits — sometimes quickly, sometimes with a last burst of intense rain. Real-time radar is more useful than any extended outlook in these months.
Rainfall drops to minimal levels. When a stray shower does appear, it's visible on the radar well before it arrives.
Whether you're working outdoors, travelling, or timing an event in Ratchaburi, knowing whether a cell will reach your location in the next 30–60 minutes is the single most useful piece of information you need.
The road network in Ratchaburi is affected by Mae Klong River flooding, flash floods on Highway 4, agricultural disruption to orchards and floating markets. Seeing the rain band's current position and direction on the map changes departure decisions.
Farming communities in Ratchaburi time planting, spraying, and harvest operations around rain windows. A radar alert 20–30 minutes before a cell arrives gives just enough time to act.
Whether you're commuting through or visiting the area around Mae Klong River, Highway 4, Damnoen Saduak floating market, the live radar shows exactly which streets are in the rain and which are still dry — not a regional smear.
From outdoor markets to construction sites to school pickups, Ratchaburi residents use real-time radar to make the same decisions they'd make anywhere in Thailand: wait, move, or reroute.
Every 5 minutes, drawing from Thai Meteorological Department radar networks. During active storm periods when conditions change fastest, you're seeing the map update as each radar sweep completes.
Yes. Set your home, work, or any location in Ratchaburi and receive a push notification when rain is approaching — with enough lead time to adjust your plans. You can also set a custom intensity threshold so light drizzle doesn't trigger an alert.
RainViewer draws directly from the same radar networks used by the Thai Meteorological Department, preserving the original resolution rather than smoothing it into regional averages. For Ratchaburi, this means you can see which street is in the rain and which is still dry.
See rain in Ratchaburi before it reaches your street
Whether you're managing logistics, timing an outdoor activity, or just deciding whether to leave now or in 20 minutes, RainViewer gives you the precision that generic weather apps don't. Street-level radar, 5-minute updates, and alerts that arrive while you can still act.
See the exact window when the storm passes and the soil is passable again
Set home, office, or school pickup - notified while you can still act
See whether the cell is moving toward you or tracking away
Recognise yesterday’s storm patterns forming again today
Track home, kids’ school, and office at the same time