Skip to main content
Paris Weather News

Browse by suburb

24 suburbs
Le MaraisHistoric Right Bank quarter of narrow lanes, Jewish heritage and independent boutiquesMontmartreHilltop artists' village crowned by the Sacré-Cœur basilicaSaint-Germain-des-PrésLeft Bank literary quarter of cafés, publishing houses and antique dealersBellevilleMulticultural hillside neighbourhood with street art and panoramic parksLa DéfenseModern high-rise business district on Paris's western edgeLe Marais - BastilleNightlife hub around the July Column, gateway to the eastern cityCanal Saint-MartinTrendy canal-side district of footbridges, bars and independent shopsLatin QuarterHistoric student quarter around the Sorbonne and PanthéonChamps-ÉlyséesGrand avenue of flagship stores running to the Arc de TriompheÎle de la CitéSeine island at the historic heart of Paris, home to Notre-DameÎle Saint-LouisQuiet residential island known for its ice cream and 17th-century mansionsPigalleNightlife district at the foot of MontmartreBatignollesVillage-like north-western neighbourhood with a leafy parkPassyElegant 16th arrondissement district near the Eiffel TowerTrocadéroGrand esplanade with the best postcard view of the Eiffel TowerInvalidesMonumental district around Napoleon's tomb and government ministriesGrenelleResidential riverside neighbourhood in the 15th arrondissementMontparnasseLeft Bank district famed for its 1920s café culture and tower viewsDenfert-RochereauSouthern crossroads neighbourhood above the Paris CatacombsButte-aux-CaillesHidden village-like enclave of cobbled streets in the 13th arrondissementChinatown Paris (Les Olympiades)Asian district of tower blocks and southeast Asian restaurantsBercyRegenerated riverside district of former wine warehouses, now parkland and cinemasNationEastern crossroads neighbourhood with a grand traffic circle and market streetsMénilmontantHillside bohemian quarter bordering Père Lachaise cemetery

Weather

Paris Weather Today

Live rain radar, current conditions, an hour-by-hour outlook and a seven-day forecast for Paris, with original local weather writing.

Live conditions are unavailable right now. Please refresh shortly.

Live rain radar

Drag to pan

Animated rain radar via RainViewer (Météo-France sources). Full Météo-France radar loop.

From the weather desk

Paris weather, explained

How to read the Paris forecast

A good forecast is really three views stacked on top of each other. The current panel tells you what it actually feels like on the pavement right now, which matters more in Paris than the raw temperature suggests, since a damp 12°C with a stiff wind off the Seine can feel considerably colder than a still, dry day at the same reading. The hourly strip is for planning the shape of your day: Paris showers are notoriously localised and short-lived, often clearing within twenty minutes, so checking whether a passing band is due before you commit to an outdoor terrace is worth the ten seconds it takes. The seven-day outlook is for shaping the week, and like anywhere it is most trustworthy across the first three or four days; beyond that, treat it as a general trend rather than a promise. For the latest Paris news alongside your forecast, see Daily Paris.

An oceanic climate at the edge of the continent

Paris sits in a band of oceanic climate, moderated by its distance from the Atlantic but still shaped by the weather systems that roll in off it. This means there is no dramatic wet season or dry season the way there is in Mediterranean France further south; rainfall is spread fairly evenly across the year in frequent, modest amounts rather than concentrated downpours, and the city sees rain on something like one day in three, on average, even though annual totals are unremarkable by European standards. Winters are mild rather than harsh, with January averages hovering a few degrees above freezing and snow settling only a handful of days most years, though sharp cold snaps do arrive when winds swing round from the east or northeast off the continental interior. Summers are warm without being oppressive most years, typically peaking in the low-to-mid twenties Celsius through July and August, though heatwaves have become a serious and growing feature of the city's summers over the past two decades. Humidity stays moderate for most of the year, and the city's relatively flat topography along the Seine basin means there is little in the way of local microclimates the way hillier cities experience.

Best time to visit and notable Paris weather events

Late spring, from May into June, and early autumn, in September and into early October, tend to offer the most reliable combination of mild temperatures, manageable crowds and decent daylight, without the heat spikes of high summer or the grey, low-light stretches of deep winter. August is the warmest month on average but also the month when many Parisians themselves leave the city, so it has a curiously quiet, shuttered character despite the tourist numbers. Two weather events stand out in the city's recent record. The August 2003 European heatwave pushed Paris temperatures above 40°C for several consecutive days, a shock for a city whose housing stock was built for damp cold rather than dry heat, and it remains the reference point for how the city thinks about heat resilience today, including the shaded-corridor and misting-fountain initiatives introduced since. More locally memorable is the flooding of the Seine, which periodically rises well above its banks after prolonged winter rain across its upstream catchment, as seen dramatically in June 2016 and again in early 2018, submerging riverside walkways and forcing the closure of the lower quays even though the historic centre itself is built high enough to stay largely dry.

Seasonal patterns through the Paris year

Spring in Paris is genuinely changeable, swinging between mild, blossom-filled afternoons in the Tuileries and sharp, showery cold snaps that catch visitors in shirtsleeves off guard; layering is the only sensible strategy from March through May. Summer brings the city's longest and lightest days, with civil twilight lingering past 10pm around the solstice, making evening walks along the Canal Saint-Martin or the Seine especially pleasant, though the stone-and-zinc rooftops of central Paris retain heat overnight during any prolonged hot spell. Autumn is arguably the city's most photogenic season, as the plane trees along the boulevards turn through October and temperatures ease gradually rather than sharply, though rainfall picks up noticeably from October onward as Atlantic depressions become more frequent. Winter is grey more often than it is cold, with overcast, low-cloud days common through December and January and direct sunlight sometimes scarce for stretches of a week or more, but temperatures rarely fall much below freezing overnight and heavy snow is memorable precisely because it is rare, usually melting from the pavements within a day or two of falling.

Weather data by Open-Meteo. Paris Weather News is independent and not affiliated with any government weather agency.