UK records its highest ever May temperature | UK weather | The Guardian
Skip to main contentSkip to navigation
People and a pet cool off in Teddington Lock in south-west London over the weekend. Photograph: Isabel Infantes/Reuters
View image in fullscreen<br>People and a pet cool off in Teddington Lock in south-west London over the weekend. Photograph: Isabel Infantes/Reuters
UK weather
UK records its highest ever May temperature
Scientists say record-breaking heat is a reminder of how climate crisis is affecting lives
Ajit Niranjan<br>Mon 25 May 2026 08.16 EDTLast modified on Mon 25 May 2026 08.19 EDT
Share
Prefer the Guardian on Google
The fierce heat sweeping Europe over the bank holiday weekend has beaten the UK’s all-time temperature record for May, with highs of up to 35C still to come on Monday afternoon.<br>A temperature of 33.5C was recorded at London’s Heathrow on Monday lunchtime, according to provisional data from the Met Offfice, beating the previous May record that was set in Camden Square in 1922 and reached again in Tunbridge Wells and Regent’s Park in 1944.
The heat is set to persist through the week, with a 35C peak expected again on Tuesday. The Met Office has forecast highs of 31C for Wednesday and 30C on Thursday.<br>Overnight temperatures on Sunday broke the UK’s highest minimum temperature for May, with Kenley airfield recording a low of 19.4C.<br>The warm weather across western Europe may be welcomed by many enjoying time off work and school but it is also expected to worsen illness and increase mortality rates. Last week the UK government’s climate advisers warned that British homes would need air conditioning as global heating reaches intolerable levels.<br>Dr Chloe Brimicombe, a climate researcher at the University of Oxford, said: “The record-breaking heat is a reminder of how climate change is impacting our lives in the UK. It highlights the urgency of recent calls for heat adaptation.”<br>People who are old, pregnant or ill are at particularly greater risk when temperatures stray outside a comfortable range. High heat stresses the body and uncomfortably warm nights prevent it from resting. Amber heat health alerts were issued on Friday, indicating a possible risk to life.<br>Heat is known as a “silent killer” because it claims vast numbers of lives that go uncounted in official statistics. Last summer, scientists attributed two in every three heat-related deaths in European cities to climate breakdown.<br>Drawing curtains, opening windows and planting trees for shade can save lives, but the UK’s Climate Change Committee said last week that even these measures were likely to be insufficient to cope with the projected rise in temperatures.<br>It recommended installing air conditioning in all care homes and hospitals within the next 10 years and in all schools within 25 years. It also called for maximum temperatures for working indoors and outdoors.<br>The Met Office said the warm spell over the weekend was driven by the development of high pressure over the country that caused air to sink, compress and heat.<br>The risk of unnaturally hot extremes has risen with average global temperatures, which have been pushed higher by a blanket of carbon pollution smothering Earth.<br>Gareth Redmond-King, of the Energy & Climate Intelligence Unit, a thinktank, said: “Scientists are clear that cutting those emissions to net zero is the only way to halt climate change and limit the danger. But we also know we’ve got more extreme heat coming this year if, as expected, El Niño joins forces with climate change to break more heat records.”<br>He added: “The Climate Change Committee was clear last week that alongside cutting emissions to net zero, adapting to our already warmed climate is far less costly than dealing with its ever more dangerous impacts.”
Explore more on these topicsUK weather<br>news
Share<br>Reuse this content
Most viewed
Most viewed
UK<br>UK politics<br>Education<br>Media<br>Society<br>Law<br>Scotland<br>Wales<br>Northern Ireland