Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport has long been the official rain gauge for metro Phoenix. Why, especially when Valley weather varies a lot?
By next week, temperatures will jump into the low 80s. Monday is expected to reach 83 degrees, with Tuesday slightly warmer at 84 degrees.
Rain in Phoenix! Our 159-day dry streak is finally over.
Metro Phoenix continued to see showers pass through the area on Tuesday morning. Here's how much rain fell and what weather to expect for the week.
Metro Phoenix and swaths of Phoenix were under a freeze warning through Wednesday. Here's how cold it could get, maps of affected areas and more.
Throughout the day on Jan. 29, there will be light, scattered rain and snow showers across Arizona. The showers will be mostly focused over north-central parts of the state, including parts of Coconino, Yavapai, Gila and Navajo Counties.
The rainy and cloudy conditions are expected to last into Wednesday night, with Wednesday morning seeing a 40% chance of rain.
With light showers moving into the Valley, Monday could be the day when Phoenix’s second-longest streak without rain comes to an end.
Metro Phoenix may see rain in the coming days. Here's the weather forecast, radar and everything to know, including how many days without rain.
"Below normal temperatures continue today, but return to near normal tomorrow," the National Weather Service Phoenix wrote on X. "Warming temperatures will continue through the weekend and into next week, with lower deserts seeing highs in the low 80s by the start of next week."
The Phoenix area will get a reprieve from below-average temperatures this week as the weather warms but could see some showers heading into early next week. After freeze warnings
A low-pressure system moving across the state through Wednesday was expected to bring scattered showers to the Valley and snow in the north. Rainfall hit the north and northwest edges of the Valley before noon on Monday, but no measurable showers hit Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport, where the office records weather, Worley said.