Search Weather by City
Start with your city or tap your location. The short-term view is best for immediate plans, while the 7 or 10 day forecast helps with trips and planning ahead.
Popular quick checks:
Forecast Overview
Use the summary for the fast read, then scroll for details. The next few hours usually matter more than the whole week.
How to Read Weather Quickly
Start with what can change your plans the fastest — rain timing, wind, or a temperature that feels very different once you are outside.
Then read the forecast in order of usefulness: current feel, next few hours, and only after that the longer outlook. Most daily decisions are made from the short-term trend, not the full week.
Feels Like
Use this first when wind or humidity matters more than the raw temperature.
Rain Timing
Light rain at the wrong hour can be more disruptive than heavier rain later on.
Wind
Wind changes comfort quickly, even when the temperature looks normal on paper.
Short-Term Trend
The next few hours usually matter more than the whole week for daily plans.
Dynamic Weather Insights
Waiting for forecast...
Load a city to see whether the day will feel sharper, warmer, or close to the number on the screen.
What This Page Helps You Decide
Jacket or not?
The right answer often comes from feels-like temperature and wind, not the raw number alone.
Go now or later?
The next few hours can matter more than the rest of the day if rain or wind timing is shifting.
Plan tomorrow instead?
Sometimes the useful answer is not “yes” or “no” — it is simply “wait until later” or “tomorrow looks better.”
Why People Recheck Weather
Because the first read tells you what the day looks like, but the second read tells you whether the timing changed enough to matter.
That is usually when the page becomes useful: not when you glance once, but when you compare what you expected with what is actually developing.