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Information regarding the temperature, precipitation and sunshine for more than 5000 cities in the United States.
Colors show the average monthly temperature across the contiguous United States. White and very light areas had average temperatures near 50°F. Blue areas on the map were cooler than 50°F; the darker the blue, the cooler the average temperature.
We show the climate in the United States by comparing the average weather in 5 representative places: New York City, Los Angeles, Miami, Phoenix, and Minneapolis. You can add or remove cities to customize the report to your liking.
Classic Weather Maps. Follow along with us on the latest weather we're watching, the threats it may bring and check out the extended forecast each day to be prepared.
Generate maps showing data for each of the 344 climate divisions in the U.S. Climate Divisional Database. You can specify monthly or yearly values, ranks, or anomalies for temperature, precipitation, heating and cooling degree days, and drought indices.
Discover average weather conditions for any location and time period with our comprehensive tool. Get reliable data sourced from ECMWF, including Temperature Min/Max, Humidity, Ring Probability, Wind Probability, and more.
The U.S. Climate Normals Quick Access tool provides graphs and tables of average temperature, precipitation, and snowfall at more than 15,000 U.S. observation stations.
This tool provides access to maps of average monthly and annual minimum temperature, maximum temperature, and total precipitation. Monthly maps of minimum temperature, maximum temperature, and precipitation from 1895 through 2015 are also available, as well as map animation and comparison tools.
These maps show annual average temperature and precipitation for the Lower 48 U.S. states based on observations collected at thousands of U.S. weather stations from 1991–2021. (Normals are available for individual weather stations in Alaska and Hawaii .)
The series allows you to visually compare average temperatures among American states and through the year. A state's color is based on its average temperature for the season. Each color represents a different 5-degree Fahrenheit span of temperature.