- The storm has ended, and current conditions are calm.
- Only quiet to slightly active levels are expected in the forecast window.
- The strongest point in the three day outlook stays below storm level.
- Recovery should continue through the next couple of days.
Current situation
The geomagnetic disturbance has moved out of the active phase, and conditions are now calm again. The current K index is 0, which matches a quiet magnetic background rather than a stormy one.
For weather-sensitive people, this usually means the body can return to a more stable rhythm. Head pressure, fatigue, or restless sleep linked to the earlier disturbance should become less likely as the day goes on.
What the forecast shows
The three day outlook remains mild. Both 2026-07-13 and 2026-07-14 are expected to reach Kp 4, which is active but still below storm level. By 2026-07-15, the forecast drops to Kp 3, a quieter level that points to a calmer finish to the period.
This pattern suggests no renewed storm is expected in the near term. Instead, the next phase looks more like a return to background conditions, with only small fluctuations possible.
What this means for sensitive people
Because the storm has already passed, the main message is recovery, not escalation. Some people may still notice residual tiredness or a mild sense of heaviness for a short time, but the likelihood of stronger geomagnetic effects is falling.
Bottom line
Space weather is easing, and the outlook is reassuring. The coming days look mostly quiet to slightly active, with the best chance of full stabilization by 2026-07-15.
Generated from live NOAA SWPC and GFZ Potsdam data and reviewed by the MeteoStorms team.
Data sources:NOAA SWPC, GFZ Potsdam
