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.
Sunday's Forecast
Viewing Forecast For
Peak District
Sunday 31st May 2026
Last updated
Sat 30th May 26 at
4:10PM
Summary for all mountain areas
Showers in Scotland, most frequent west where hill cloud will linger; clearer east, cloud caps around showers. Early showers and hill cloud England and Wales, cloud lifts to just passing caps Scafell and Yr Wyddfa, sun bursts breaking out and showers largely fade. Moderate breeze, occasional stronger gusts high tops.
Headline for Peak District
Morning showers; mostly dry afternoon, increasing sun
How windy? (On the summits)
Westerly 20-25mph, occasionally lighter speeds; some stronger gusts in the early morning over tops, and also around showers.
Effect of the wind on you?
Fairly small, some nuisance breezes over high edges, and gusty early.
How Wet?
Morning showers, substantially dry afternoon
Scattered showers drifting from the west, small risk of a few heavier falls in the morning. Easing from midday, the afternoon mostly dry, just a few spots of drizzly rain possible.
Cloud on the hills?
Soon lifting above the summits
Most hills above 500m start in cloud, some lower banks on western aspects north of Kinder Scout. Lifting after daybreak to clear the summits by midday.
Chance of cloud free summits?
Rising to above 90%
Sunshine and air clarity?
Patchwork of cloud and sun, more extensive sunny periods through afternoon. Very good visibility.
Temperature (at 600m)
9 or 10C, rising to 13C.
And in the valleys
12C at dawn rising to 16 or 17C.
Viewing Forecast For
Peak District
Monday 1st June 2026
Last updated
Sat 30th May 26 at
4:10PM
How windy? (On the summits)
South-southwesterly 20-25mph, strengthening, 30-35mph by evening some stronger breezes possible.
Effect of the wind on you?
Ease of walking impacted from dawn, deteriorating to strenuous conditions, strongest wind may affect stability.
How Wet?
Rain soon frequent
Patchy rain drifts from the southwest from before dawn, gradually becoming more frequent, a few heavy bursts, and probably persistent for several hours.
Cloud on the hills?
Often covering high terrain
Patches at varied heights in the morning, briefly lifting to summits with breaks for several hours, but cloud then more often shrouding summits through afternoon, banks to 500m with lower patches around rain, fewer breaks with time.
Chance of cloud free summits?
70% lowering to 30%
Sunshine and air clarity?
Some sunny glimpses in the morning but soon trending overcast. Very good visibility, deteriorating with fog and rain.
Temperature (at 600m)
10C rising to 12 or 13C. Feeling like 3C in strongest direct wind.
And in the valleys
11C at dawn, rising to 16C.
Viewing Forecast For
Peak District
Tuesday 2nd June 2026
Last updated
Sat 30th May 26 at
4:10PM
How windy? (On the summits)
Westerly 15 to 20mph, occasional 25mph.
Effect of the wind on you?
Fairly small, but feeling breezy on exposed higher moors.
How Wet?
Heavy thundery showers
Showery rain on and off, but likely frequent for a few hours through middle of day, some heavy bursts, risk of thunder. Many showers may clear east later, but possibly still further showers into evening.
Cloud on the hills?
Lifting above tops
Some patchy cloud banks mainly over western higher moors in the morning, but lifting to leave most cloud above the hills.
Chance of cloud free summits?
80%
Sunshine and air clarity?
Glimpses of sun. Visibility very good, reduced in showers.
Temperature (at 600m)
10C up to 13C afternoon.
And in the valleys
11C at dawn, rising to max 18C afternoon.
Planning Outlook
An unsettled week ahead with low pressure facilitating periods of rain, showers, and a strengthening wind, as well as cooler temperatures. Rain spreads across most areas from the southwest on Monday, followed by showers on Tuesday, these showers perhaps turning into thunderstorms in central and east areas. The only settled window this week overnight into Wednesday, then more rain soon arrives from the west through Wednesday morning, spreading widely and with it gales likely over most hills as well except the far north of Scotland. Thursday and Friday remain showery and windy, nearly persistent rain and extensive low cloud northwest England and west Scotland, a few breaks in the east but showers always most widespread afternoon and even smaller hills seeing cloud over summits for periods.



