Checking whether your SEA–YYZ flight will be bumpy? RideScore samples the live forecast winds at cruise altitude along the actual Seattle–Toronto route and scores every leg of the flight, in plain English.
This is a jet-stream route: crossing the North Atlantic (or continental) jet means winter flights often pick up clear-air turbulence where wind speeds change sharply with altitude. Eastbound flights ride the tailwind; westbound flights fight it and are usually a little longer and, in winter, a little bumpier.
RideScore reads the same global weather models professionals use (NOAA GFS / ECMWF via Open-Meteo), computes wind shear, jet-stream strength and storm energy at up to 11 points along the SEA–YYZ great-circle, and turns it into a simple 0–10 bumpiness score for each leg of your flight — plus recent pilot reports from aircraft that just flew nearby. It's free, with no account and no tracking, and works up to 16 days ahead.
More routes from Seattle (SEA) · More routes from Toronto (YYZ)
This page shows typical route characteristics; conditions on your day will differ — run the live forecast. Estimates only, not an aviation weather briefing. © 2026 RideScore · made with ❤️ in Amsterdam · About · Terms