The Met Office is warning that its annual climate stocktake shows weather records and extremes now the norm in the UK.

The warning comes in the latest assessment of the UK’s climate which shows how baselines are shifting, records are becoming more frequent, and that temperature and rainfall extremes are becoming the norm.
The latest State of the UK Climate report, published by Wiley in the Royal Meteorological Society’s ‘International Journal of Climatology’, provides insight into the UK’s changing climate.
The report highlights how the UK’s climate has warmed steadily from the 1980s onwards, albeit with individual cooler years, with the greatest implications from the increasing frequency and intensity of daily temperature extremes.
The last three years have been in the UK’s top five warmest on record, with 2024 the fourth warmest year in records dating back to 1884. In 2024 specifically, we saw the UK’s second warmest February, warmest May, fifth warmest December, fifth warmest winter and warmest spring on record. Statistics like this are typical of recent years in the UK’s climate records and some of these have already been surpassed in 2025.
The report shows how the UK has warmed at a rate of approximately 0.25°C per decade since the 1980s, with the most recent decade (2015-2024) 1.24°C warmer than 1961-1990. Looking even further back, the Central England Temperature series shows that recent warming has far exceeded any observed temperatures in at least 300 years.
The report is based on observations from a network of several hundred weather stations, with temperature and rainfall data from these extending back to the 19th Century providing long term context. These data tell us how our climate has already changed here in the UK.
Extremes becoming the norm
New analysis in the report examines the shifting frequency and intensity of heat and rainfall extremes. Understanding how these extremes are changing is particularly important because these tend to cause the greatest impacts, such as heatwaves or floods.
The number of days with temperatures 5°C above the 1961-1990 average has doubled for the most recent decade 2015-2024 compared to 1961-1990. For 8°C above average the number has trebled and for 10°C it has quadrupled. This shows how the hottest days we experience in the UK have increased in frequency dramatically in just a few decades.
A graph showing the number of days where maximum temperatures are 5, 8 and 10 degrees above average. There is an increase in the bars that show higher anomalies.
When comparing the most recent decade 2015-2024 to 1961-1990, the hottest summer days and coldest winter nights have warmed around twice as much as average summer days and winter nights have in some parts of the UK.
At the same time, the frequency of the coldest nights we experience has also dropped dramatically.
Although there is much more variability with rainfall, it is still possible to see how extremes are being impacted here too. For the most recent decade 2015-2024, the number of months where counties are recording monthly rainfall totals of at least twice the 1991-2020 monthly average has increased by over 50% compared to the number in 1961-1990.
As the UK’s climate warms, it is also becoming wetter, with this report showing that the increase in rainfall is entirely due to an upward trend in the winter half-year (October to March). For 2015-2024 the winter half-year is now 16% wetter than 1961-1990 for the UK.
Met Office Climate Scientist and Lead Author of the State of the UK Climate report, Mike Kendon, said:
“Every year that goes by is another upward step on the warming trajectory our climate is on. Observations show that our climate in the UK is now notably different to what it was just a few decades ago. We are now seeing records being broken very frequently as we see temperature and rainfall extremes being the most affected by our changing climate.
“This pace of change and clustering of consecutive records is not a natural variation in our climate. Numerous studies have shown how human emissions of greenhouse gasses are warming the atmosphere and changing the weather we experience on the ground. Our climate in the UK is now different to what it was just a few decades ago, this is clear from our observations.”
Weather extremes in 2024
As in recent years, floods and storms brought the worst severe weather impacts to the UK in 2024.
There was widespread flooding in early January associated with the run of named storms from the Autumn of 2023 including storms Babet, Ciarán, Debi, Elin, Fergus, Gerrit, Henk, Isha and Jocelyn. October 2023 to March 2024 was the wettest winter half-year on record for England and Wales in over 250 years with areas affected by flooding including eastern Scotland, Derbyshire, Nottinghamshire and the West Midlands.
Parts of central England experienced extreme rainfall in late September from three successive low pressure systems. The Oxford Radcliffe Observatory recorded its wettest 2-day period in a near 200-year daily record and wettest calendar month since 1774; some locations recorded three to four times the monthly average rainfall for September. There was widespread disruption with several hundred properties flooded.
Parts of South Wales experienced severe flooding from storm Bert in late November 2024, with 100 to 150mm or more of rain falling across high ground. This was a multi-hazard storm with heavy rain, strong winds and some snow, and several deaths reported.
Red warnings were issued for storm Isha in January and storm Darragh in December – a reminder that such storms are an integral part of our climate due to the UK’s position in the Atlantic storm track. The unusual north-westerly to northerly direction of winds from Darragh is likely to have contributed to the number of trees brought down by this storm. However, observations do not currently suggest that the UK is becoming windier or stormier.
Met Office Chief Scientist, Prof Stephen Belcher, said:
“We are experiencing more severe weather events in the UK due to climate change. They are a potent reminder of our responsibility to citizens now, and to future generations, to accelerate efforts to adapt our society and infrastructure to cope with these weather extremes. The climate is likely to continue to change, and so we need to prepare for the impacts that will have on the weather we experience on the ground.”
Chief Executive of the Royal Meteorological Society, Professor Liz Bentley, commented:
“This latest edition of the State of the UK Climate report reinforces the clear and urgent signals of our changing climate, rooted in robust observational science. It documents changes in temperature, rainfall, sea level, and weather extremes that are affecting lives, infrastructure, and ecosystems across the UK.
“The report draws particular attention to the last decade that clearly shows how quickly our climate is evolving to inform policy, resilience planning, and adaptation. Perhaps most striking is the growing impact of extremes. While long-term averages are shifting, it is the extreme heat, intense rainfall and droughts that are having the most immediate and dramatic effects on people and nature. This report is not just a record of change, but a call to action.”
Click here to read the report online
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