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Daily Forecast

Rain & a few storms are scattering across WA, SA, Tas, Vic & into southwest NSW due to a slow-moving low. The low is also bringing strong winds to WA's far south. Onshore winds are bringing further showers to the coasts of Qld & northern NSW. A high is keeping elsewhere dry.

Now

Min

Max

Mostly CloudySydneyNSW

14.2°C

13°C
22°C

Clearing ShowerMelbourneVIC

14.7°C

15°C
20°C

Mostly CloudyBrisbaneQLD

14.7°C

15°C
23°C

Fog Then SunnyPerthWA

6.2°C

5°C
18°C

RainAdelaideSA

17.8°C

15°C
20°C

Clearing ShowerCanberraACT

8.4°C

6°C
18°C

Clearing ShowerHobartTAS

10.1°C

11°C
16°C

Mostly SunnyDarwinNT

23.8°C

22°C
32°C

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There are no active warnings for this location.

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Low Temperature

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Records data is supplied by the Bureau of Meteorology and has not been independently quality controlled.

Latest News


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Today, 10:21AM UTC

El Niño is here and it could challenge records in 2026

The Bureau of Meteorology has declared that El Niño has arrived and it is likely to last until at least the end of the year. Forecast models also suggest this could be one of the strongest El Niño events on record. What is El Niño? El Niño is one of three phases of the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) – a global ocean and atmosphere phenomenon originating in the tropical Pacific. The other phases of ENSO are La Niña and neutral (neither El Niño nor La Niña). El Niño occurs when sea surface temperatures in the tropical Pacific become warmer than average and trade winds blowing across the tropical Pacific weaken or reverse. These changes cause cloud and rainfall to become suppressed in the western Pacific and enhanced over the central and eastern Pacific. El Niño also causes changes to rainfall and temperatures patterns in other parts of the world. El Niño usually takes months to become established and often lasts for several consecutive seasons, sometimes persisting over a couple of years. El Niño events typically start in autumn or winter, peak in spring or summer and decay early in the new year. El Niño declared On Tuesday, June 16, the Bureau of Meteorology declared that El Niño was underway in the tropical Pacific. This declaration followed several months of increasing temperature anomalies in the central and eastern tropical Pacific Ocean and recent atmospheric changes that are consistent with an El Niño pattern. According to the Bureau, “Sea surface temperatures (SSTs) in the central tropical Pacific are above El Niño thresholds, and atmospheric indicators are also aligning with an El Niño state. This suggests the ocean and atmosphere are acting to reinforce the ENSO state.” Image: Global sea surface temperature anomalies on June 14, 2026, showing a tongue of abnormally warm water in the central and eastern tropical Pacific Ocean. This is a clear sign of El Niño. Source: NOAA. This declaration from the Bureau follows a similar announcement from the United States National Weather Service (NWS) on Thursday, June 11. Earlier in the month, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) had also issued a statement warning the world to prepare for El Niño, noting that it could be a strong event that “will exacerbate drought and heavy rainfall and increase the risk of heatwaves both on land and in the ocean.” This El Niño could be one for the record books Current forecasts indicate that this El Niño will continue to strengthen during the Southern Hemisphere’s winter and spring and will likely last beyond the end of the year. This El Niño is expected to become a strong or very strong event, with the Bureau pointing out that “around half of the models indicate this event could peak at levels among the highest observed since 1950.” One of the key metrics used to measure El Niño is the relative Niño3.4 index – a measure of sea surface temperature anomalies on the central tropical Pacific Ocean. In Australia, El Niño occurs when the relative Niño3.4 index is above +0.8°C for a prolonged period. According to data on the Bureau of Meteorology’s website, the highest monthly Niño 3.4 value in records dating back to 1900 was +2.65°C in November 1902. The Bureau’s ACCESS-S model currently forecasts the relative Niño3.4 index to reach +3.3°C in November this year, which would obliterate the old record by more than 0.6°C. What does this El Niño mean for Australia? No two El Niño events are the same and stronger El Niño events do not necessarily relate to stronger impacts in Australia. However, El Niño typically makes the following weather more likely in Australia: Reduced rainfall during winter and spring, particularly over the eastern half of Australia. Above average daytime temperatures in southern and southeastern Australia from winter to summer. Increased winter and early-spring frost risk in southeastern Australia due to clearer skies. Less snow, including a lower peak snow depth and shorter snow season. Delayed monsoon onset in northern Australia. Increased risk of fires. Current long-range forecasts for Australia point towards below average rain over large areas of southern and eastern Australia between July and September this year. Daytime temperatures are also expected to be higher than average for much of the country during this three-month period. Image: Chance of exceeding median rainfall during the three-month period from July to September 2026. Source: Bureau of Meteorology. Image: Chance of exceeding median maximum temperature during the three-month period from July to September 2026. Source: Bureau of Meteorology. It’s also important to note that El Niño will not be the only influence on Australia’s weather during the coming months and seasons. Other climate drivers, including the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) and Southern Annular Mode (SAM) may also enhance or counteract the influence of El Niño as we move through the second half of 2026.

Today, 4:30AM UTC

Australia's shortest day of the year this weekend

The Southern Hemisphere’s winter solstice will occur this Sunday, marking the shortest day of the year in Australia based on daylight hours. The winter solstice marks the moment either of Earth’s poles reaches its furthest tilt away from the Sun. When this happens, the hemisphere oriented away from the Sun experiences its shortest day of the year based on the amount of time between sunrise and sunset. The 2026 winter solstice for the Southern Hemisphere will occur at 8:25 am UTC (6:25 pm AEST) on Sunday, June 21. Australia's capital city day lengths will range from about nine hours in Hobart to just over 11 hours and 20 minutes in Darwin. This almost 2.5-hour difference is due to the difference in latitude between southern and northern Australia. Image: Sunrise, sunset and day length times on the date of the 2026 winter solstice. Source: Weatherzone. While the winter solstice doesn’t have any direct influence on the weather, it does mark the start of the astronomical winter in the Southern Hemisphere. The long nights surrounding the solstice also offer a good opportunity to view things in the night sky, including this month’s full moon on the night of June 30. Following the 2026 winter solstice on Sunday, days will start to get longer, and nights will get shorter in Australia. This trend will continue for the following six months until the date of the summer solstice in late-December.

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Today, 3:05AM UTC

Massive northwest cloudband brings heavy rain

A vast cloudband stretching across Australia has brought heavy rain to parts of South Australia, Victoria and Tasmania overnight, and rain continues to tumble down this Tuesday. This is a classic winter system known as a northwest cloudband – a broad layer of cloud which can stretch like a sash across the continent, fed by Indian Ocean moisture. READ MORE: What is a northwest cloudband? Image: Combined satellite and radar image for SE Australia at 11 am (AEST) on Tuesday, June 16, 2026. Source: Weatherzone. Notable rainfall totals from this system in the 24 hours to 9am Tuesday included: 50.4 mm at Ashton in the Adelaide Hills. 32 mm at Edenhope in Victoria’s relatively dry Wimmera region, with a state high of 37.2mm at the rural locality of Booroopki, a few kilometres north of Edenhope, near the SA border. 21.4 mm at Adelaide’s official West Terrace/ngayirdapira weather station, the heaviest daily total to date in 2026. Numerous falls between 10 mm and 20 mm in northwestern Tasmania, a region which often receives the state’s heaviest rainfall totals when moisture streams down from the northwest. The effect of the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) on the current weather system The IOD is an index used to monitor sea surface temperatures across the tropical Indian Ocean. It can have a strong influence on weather patterns across Australia, especially when northwest cloudbands form. Northwest cloudbands – like the one affecting Australia’s weather this Tuesday – typically produce more rain across Australia during a negative phase of the IOD. A negative IOD occurs when there are cooler-than-average sea surface temperatures in the western tropical Indian Ocean near the Horn of Africa, and warmer-than-average surface water in the eastern tropical Indian Ocean, near Indonesia. Currently, the IOD is in a neutral phase, not a negative phase. But as today’s weather shows, that doesn’t mean we don’t also see moisture-laden northwest cloudbands during a neutral IOD. With the current warmer-than-average sea surface temperatures to Australia’s northwest, and a low pressure system centred over the Great Australian Bight drawing moisture southwards, key ingredients are in place for today’s widespread wet weather. Image: Hourly graphs for Adelaide, SA, on the Weatherzone app. Heavy rain either side of the cloudband in WA, NSW There’s a lot going on with the weather in Australia today. If you look at the satellite and radar loop below, you can see how moisture streamed down from the northwest (as mentioned above), while parts of the West Australian coast saw heavy rain from the southeast – as in, from the completely opposite direction, as air rotated around the low in the bight. Image: 6-hour combined satellite and radar for parts of Australia near the Great Australian Bight to 10 am (AWST) on Tuesday, June 16, 2026. At least 10 weather stations in and around the picturesque coastal WA town of Esperance recorded 24-hour rainfall totals exceeding 50mm in the 24 hours to 9am this Tuesday. Esperance itself recorded 60.8 mm, which was within a whisker of the June daily rainfall record of 61mm, while Esperance Airport recorded a state high of 89.2 mm. Meanwhile the highest official 24-hour rainfall total in Australia was 103 mm at Bellingen (Crystal Creek), just inland from Coffs Harbour on the NSW Mid North Coast. That downpour was caused by moisture pushing onshore from the Tasman Sea overnight. The moisture was reinforced by anomalously warm waters off the coast, as well as southeasterly winds extending up into the mid-levels, allowing a steady stream of showers to accummulate over the region. More rain likely across a wide area, no significant snow on the horizon As the low pressure system and associated cold front currently centred over the Great Australian Bight track slowly east, further rain can be expected across large parts of inland and eastern Australia in coming days, as well as in Tasmania. Generally mild temperatures for winter will prevail across the southeast until Friday or Saturday, when an injection of cooler air will arrive from the south, albeit a relatively weak one. At this stage, there’s the potential for only light snowfalls at higher elevations in the end-of-week system. Please check the latest on the Weatherzone snow page.

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