Peak District
The southernmost Pennines, covering the entire Peak District National Park, also extending north to hills accessed from Hebden Bridge, and including the hills immediately north of Manchester.
Saturday's Forecast
Viewing Forecast For
Peak District
Saturday 31st January 2026
Last updated
Fri 30th Jan 26 at
4:30PM
Summary for all mountain areas
Winter conditions on most high mountains; deep snow and large drifts in central/east Scotland, whiteout conditions in fog. Mostly dry NW Scotland. Morning rain in south Scotland and England trends patchy, often dry south Pennines. Often raining in Wales, most on western slopes. Freezing levels rise towards upper slopes.
Headline for Peak District
Some early patchy rain, then largely dry with high cloud breaks
How windy? (On the summits)
South-southeasterly 25-35mph, shifting southerly with an easing trend towards 20-25mph.
Effect of the wind on you?
Walking strenuous in exposure to start the day with wind chill, effects probably easing to fairly small.
How Wet?
Patchy morning rain then often dry
Patchy rain in the morning soon clears to the north for often dry hills, only odd spots of drizzle here and there. Later, patches tending to return.
Cloud on the hills?
Breaks to summits for several hours
A sheet of cloud shrouds the fells from 600m up to start the day, often lower in rain and eastern slopes. Bases soon start to lift with a breaking trend clearing the summits for periods before returning late in the day.
Chance of cloud free summits?
50%
Sunshine and air clarity?
Bright/sunny bursts soon arriving for several hours, then high cloud building again later. Visibility often good though a haze will linger.
Temperature (at 600m)
3 or 4C. Feeling as cold as -5 to -8C in strongest direct wind.
And in the valleys
4C from dawn, rising to 5 or 6C afternoon.
Viewing Forecast For
Peak District
Sunday 1st February 2026
Last updated
Fri 30th Jan 26 at
4:30PM
How windy? (On the summits)
South-southwesterly 10-20mph.
Effect of the wind on you?
Mostly small.
How Wet?
Rain on-and-off
Patches of rain will come and go throughout the day, a few dry periods are possible, but always with a tendency to return, most notable falls west.
Cloud on the hills?
Fairly extensive though variable
Cloud often shrouds high terrain, a few odd higher breaks may occur but also cloud filling in to lower slopes for periods.
Chance of cloud free summits?
30%
Sunshine and air clarity?
Largely cloudy, visibility variable, at times good but turning poor in rain, also some haze around.
Temperature (at 600m)
3C.
And in the valleys
3 or 4C from dawn, rising to 5 or locally 6C.
Viewing Forecast For
Peak District
Monday 2nd February 2026
Last updated
Fri 30th Jan 26 at
4:30PM
How windy? (On the summits)
Southeasterly 20-25mph, gradually rising to 30-35mph by dusk with and easterly shift, may rise further for several hours.
Effect of the wind on you?
Fairly small to start, winds increasingly uncomfortable, strenuous walking by dusk and feeling chilly.
How Wet?
Patchy rain
Rain affecting many hills on-and-off, totals usually small, but a few heavier moments may befall eastern slopes.
Cloud on the hills?
Fairly extensive, breaks possible
Mostly covering high terrain with bases regularly to middle slopes in the east; cloud amount will vary, with high breaks and likely to summits at times.
Chance of cloud free summits?
30%
Sunshine and air clarity?
Often cloudy but a few bright/sunny breaks here and there. Poor visibility and hazy east, better west of high moors.
Temperature (at 600m)
2C from dawn, rising a degree. Feeling like -5 to -10C with time in the wind.
And in the valleys
3C from dawn, lifting to 5C.
Planning Outlook
Unsettled weather persists through the late weekend and into next week: a southerly flow is dominant through Monday, lifting freezing levels and brining precipitation to most mountain groups through the early week. The Munros will likely stay below freezing; precipitation will continue to fall as snow on high terrain: snowdrifts from the Cairngorms to central and southern Highlands with a continued risk of flooding here. Gales are likely as well. Southeasterly winds will tend to re-establish later in the week, lowering freezing levels and drawing cloud and precipitation into the Pennines and eastern Scotland, the snow level dropping to middle elevations with time. Cloud and precipitation more patchy in the west with the brightest skies northwest of high summits.



