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Weather

Canberra Weather Today

Live rain radar, current conditions, an hour-by-hour outlook and a seven-day forecast for Canberra, with original writing about the city's climate from The Daily Canberra.

Today's briefing

7°C and partly cloudy right now in Canberra, heading for a top of 7°C. Overnight down to 4°C, with a 100% chance of rain.

Weather

Canberra weather

7°C

Partly cloudy now, 7°C / 4°C today.

Photo by Roman Biernacki on Pexels · credit and licence

7°C

Partly cloudy · feels like 2°C

Today
7°C / 4°C
Humidity
69%
Wind
23 km/h NW
UV index
1 · Low
Sunrise
7:10 am
Sunset
5:07 pm
Updated
12:52 pm

Next 24 hours

  1. Now

    7°C

    18%

  2. 1pm

    7°C

    22%

  3. 2pm

    7°C

    17%

  4. 3pm

    7°C

    7%

  5. 4pm

    7°C

    0%

  6. 5pm

    6°C

    0%

  7. 6pm

    6°C

    0%

  8. 7pm

    6°C

    0%

  9. 8pm

    6°C

    0%

  10. 9pm

    6°C

    0%

  11. 10pm

    7°C

    0%

  12. 11pm

    6°C

    1%

  13. 12am

    6°C

    2%

  14. 1am

    6°C

    2%

  15. 2am

    6°C

    1%

  16. 3am

    6°C

    0%

  17. 4am

    6°C

    0%

  18. 5am

    6°C

    7%

  19. 6am

    6°C

    18%

  20. 7am

    6°C

    25%

  21. 8am

    6°C

    26%

  22. 9am

    6°C

    25%

  23. 10am

    6°C

    24%

  24. 11am

    6°C

    25%

Live rain radar

Drag to pan, scroll the page over it

Animated rain radar via RainViewer (Bureau of Meteorology sources). Full Bureau of Meteorology radar loop.

Tomorrow's Canberra forecast, in your inbox

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Seven-day forecast

  1. Sun

    Showers

    7°C 4°C

    Rain 100%

  2. Mon

    Drizzle

    9°C 6°C

    Rain 34%

  3. Tue

    Drizzle

    10°C 7°C

    Rain 53%

  4. Wed

    Clear

    12°C 3°C

    Rain 4%

  5. Thu

    Mainly clear

    14°C 3°C

    Rain 0%

  6. Fri

    Overcast

    13°C 0°C

    Rain 0%

  7. Sat

    Overcast

    14°C 3°C

    Rain 6%

Air quality

24

Good

US AQI

PM2.5
3
PM10
4
Ozone
49

Air quality by Open-Meteo (CAMS), in µg/m³.

Sun and moon

Sunrise
7:10 am
Sunset
5:07 pm
Daylight
9h 57m

Waning crescent

8% lit

From the weather desk

Canberra weather, explained

Why Canberra mornings are the coldest in the country

Canberra sits on a high inland plain, about 580 metres above sea level, ringed by hills that trap cool air at night. On clear winter evenings the heat the city absorbed during the day radiates straight back up into a dry, cloudless sky, while the surrounding ranges funnel pooled cold air down into the basin where the suburbs sit. Add a southerly off the Snowy Mountains and a frost can settle on Tuggeranong and Gungahlin well before dawn. That same geography is why the temperature can climb fifteen degrees by lunchtime: once the sun clears Mount Ainslie, the dry continental air warms quickly. It is a pattern locals know well — a coat at 7am, sleeves rolled up by midday. Compared with coastal capitals, where the ocean keeps overnight lows mild, Canberra's inland setting gives the city the sharpest daily temperature swing of any Australian capital, and the most reliable bite of frost between May and August.

Canberra's coldest and warmest months, and what to expect

July is reliably the coldest month in Canberra. Overnight lows hover around zero, frosts are routine, and the average daytime maximum sits in the low teens. Mornings often start under fog that drifts in from the Molonglo and lifts by mid-morning to reveal a sharp blue sky. June and August feel similar; both deliver crisp, still days that are excellent for walking once the sun is up. At the other end of the calendar, January is the warmest month. Daytime maximums average in the high twenties and stretch into the mid-thirties during heat spells, with low humidity that makes the heat feel dry rather than oppressive. Evenings cool off quickly thanks to the elevation, so even hot January days end with a comfortable night. Spring and autumn are the transitional months, with wide daily ranges, occasional thunderstorms in spring and the famous clear, still autumn afternoons that turn the city's deciduous streets gold.

The best time of year to visit Canberra

If the question is when Canberra is at its prettiest, the answer is autumn. From mid-April through May the city's planted avenues — oaks, planes, ornamental pears, claret ashes — turn through yellow, orange and deep red, and the dry inland air keeps the leaves on the branches longer than coastal cities manage. Days are mild, nights are cool and the light is soft. Spring, from late September into November, is the other strong window: Floriade fills Commons Park, the lake foreshore greens up and warmer afternoons make Mount Ainslie and the Arboretum easy walks. Summer suits visitors who want long evenings, outdoor concerts and lake swims, with the trade-off of occasional very hot days. Winter is quiet and atmospheric, and a good time for galleries, the National Library and a long lunch indoors. For first-time visitors, late April to mid-May or early October is usually the sweet spot: cooperative weather, full programs at the national institutions, and the city looking its best.

Common questions

Canberra weather FAQ

Does it snow in Canberra?

Snow is rare in central Canberra. The city sees the occasional light dusting or flurry every few years, usually when a cold front sweeps up from the south, but it seldom settles. For reliable snow, locals head about 40 minutes west to the Brindabella Range and Corin Forest, or two to three hours south to the Snowy Mountains resorts. Frost, on the other hand, is a Canberra winter staple: clear, cold nights leave a heavy white frost across the suburbs from May through August.

How cold does Canberra get in winter?

July is the coldest month. Overnight lows hover around zero and frequently dip below it, so frosts are routine, while daytime maximums sit in the low teens (around 11 to 12 degrees). Mornings often begin under fog that lifts by mid-morning to a clear blue sky. June and August are only marginally milder. Canberra's inland, elevated setting gives it the frostiest winter mornings of any Australian capital.

What is the hottest month in Canberra?

January is the warmest month, with average daytime maximums in the high 20s and heat spells that push into the mid-30s. The air is dry rather than humid, so the heat feels less oppressive than in coastal cities, and the elevation means evenings cool down quickly for comfortable nights.

When is the best time to visit Canberra for good weather?

Autumn, from mid-April to May, is the standout: mild days, cool nights, soft light and the city's avenues turning gold and red. Spring, from late September to November, is the other strong window, with warming afternoons, Floriade in bloom and long daylight. Both windows avoid the frosts of deep winter and the hottest summer days.

Why is Canberra colder than other Australian capitals?

Canberra sits on a high inland plain about 580 metres above sea level, ringed by hills. With no coast to moderate the temperature, heat escapes rapidly on clear nights and cold air pools in the basin where the suburbs sit. That same dry, continental setting produces the sharpest daily temperature swing of any Australian capital: a frosty dawn can give way to a mild, sunny afternoon.

Does Canberra get much rain?

Rainfall is moderate and spread fairly evenly through the year, totalling around 600mm annually, which is less than the coastal capitals. Spring and summer bring the occasional afternoon thunderstorm, while winter days are more often dry, clear and frosty than wet. Prolonged wet spells are uncommon.

How accurate is the Canberra weather forecast?

The first three to four days of the forecast are the most reliable, and accuracy tapers over the back half of the week. This page refreshes current conditions and the outlook regularly through the day, so it is worth checking the hourly strip before you head out: Canberra's wide daily temperature range means the morning and afternoon can feel like different seasons.

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Weather data by Open-Meteo. The Daily Canberra is independent and not affiliated with any government weather agency.

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