Low
Pollen is low — most people won't notice
Grass pollen is the main trigger · Tomorrow → · Updated 13 hours ago
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Pollen levels in Pembroke Pines are currently low. Most people should not experience allergy symptoms from pollen.
Tree pollen: None. Grass pollen: Moderate. Weed pollen: None.
Pollen conditions in Pembroke Pines are expected to remain similar tomorrow.
Pembroke Pines sits in the subtropical climate of South Florida, where warm temperatures, high humidity, and a long growing season create a nearly year-round allergy environment rather than distinct on/off seasons.
Tree pollen tends to dominate from late winter through spring, with oak being the most prominent offender, alongside cedar, pine, cypress, bayberry, and the widespread melaleuca and Brazilian pepper that thrive across South Florida landscapes. Oak pollen typically peaks from February through April, coating surfaces in its telltale yellow dust.
As tree counts taper, grass pollen takes over from late spring into summer and often lingers into fall, driven mainly by Bahia, Bermuda, and St. Augustine grasses common in regional lawns.
Weed pollen becomes more noticeable in late summer and fall, with ragweed, pigweed, dog fennel, and sedges as key contributors. Overlap between lingering grasses and emerging weeds in late summer can intensify symptoms significantly.
Non-pollen triggers are equally important here: persistent humidity fuels outdoor and indoor mold year-round, dust mites flourish in air-conditioned homes, and proximity to Everglades moisture plus urban vehicle emissions can worsen reactions.
Overall, Pembroke Pines is defined by a prolonged, overlapping allergy calendar where oak, tropical grasses, ragweed, and mold are the defining triggers.