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Home Switzerland

Switzerland swelters amidst fourth hottest May since 1864

GenevaTimes by GenevaTimes
May 28, 2026
in Switzerland
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Switzerland swelters amidst fourth hottest May since 1864
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Hot, dry conditions have dominated spring in Switzerland

Keystone-SDA

Switzerland is poised to record its fourth hottest month of May since 1864, according to the meteorlogical service MeteoSwiss.


This content was published on


May 28, 2026 – 11:48

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Temperatures have so far been 1.8 degrees Celcius above average. The spring season is also set to go down in the record books as historically dry.

The nationwide average daily temperature for May so far this year has been 10.7C, MeteoSwiss reported. The rainy period at the beginning of the month was not enough to compensate for the significant shortfall in rainfall since March.

In some regions, barely 40% of the average rainfall fell in May. Barring a huge surprise between now and Friday, this spring is likely to be one of the driest since measurements began in 1901.

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Boats on Lake Zurich.

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Emissions reduction

Heatwave season expanding in Europe, warns Swiss climate scientist




This content was published on


May 28, 2026



Swiss climatologist Sonia Seneviratne warns that the heatwave season is expanding, underscoring growing climate risks.



Read more: Heatwave season expanding in Europe, warns Swiss climate scientist


Nationally, rainfall has only reached 56% of average values, a deficit of almost 150 millimetres.

The current situation is reminiscent of the historic drought years of 1944 and 1976. Canton Graubünden and the Engadine region are particularly hard hit. There has been less than half the usual rainfall.

The Swiss government has issued a Level 2 alert, which currently applies to the Alps and the eastern part of the Plateau. This is equivalent to a mild drought, and no improvement is expected in the short term.

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Climate change consequences: Skiers in Engelberg on January 7, 2023. The so-called zero-degree limit, where rain turns to snow, has risen by several hundred metres since the early 20th century and is projected to climb another 550 metres by the end of the century, to around 1,450 metres in winter.

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Climate adaptation

Switzerland braces for more heatwaves, droughts and violent storms




This content was published on


Nov 4, 2025



Switzerland is heading for a future that is hotter, drier and more unpredictable, with less snow and heavier rainfall, according to a new climate report.



Read more: Switzerland braces for more heatwaves, droughts and violent storms


Early heatwave

Switzerland has already experienced its first hot days since the Whitsun weekend, which is unusually early for the season, and even earlier for several consecutive days.

The mercury rose above 30 degrees in Ticino and in several places north of the Alps, even topping 34 degrees on Wednesday in Valais (34.2C in Sion).

The high mountains were no exception. It was necessary to climb to 4,328 metres to find the 0C isotherm on Whit Monday. This makes it the third-highest recorded zero degree day in May.

With climate change, the heat is coming on earlier and earlier, lasting longer and longer, at higher altitudes and with increasing intensity, the Federal Office of Meteorology and Climatology points out in its bulletin.

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Switzerland experiences one of the driest springs ever

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Climate adaptation

Exceptionally dry April grips Switzerland, warns MeteoSwiss




This content was published on


Apr 24, 2026



This April is shaping up to be the driest since records began, according to the Federal Office of Meteorology and Climatology (MeteoSwiss).



Read more: Exceptionally dry April grips Switzerland, warns MeteoSwiss


Adapted from French by AI/mga

We select the most relevant news for an international audience and use automatic translation tools to translate them into English. A journalist then reviews the translation for clarity and accuracy before publication.  

Providing you with automatically translated news gives us the time to write more in-depth articles. The news stories we select have been written and carefully fact-checked by an external editorial team from news agencies such as Bloomberg or Keystone.

If you have any questions about how we work, write to us at english@swissinfo.ch

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