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.

Tuesday's Forecast

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Click here to download the latest PDF Last Updated Mon 16th Feb 26 at 3:52PM
View our detailed version Last Updated Mon 16th Feb 26 at 3:52PM

Viewing Forecast For

Peak District
Tuesday 17th February 2026
Last updated Mon 16th Feb 26 at 3:52PM

Summary for all mountain areas

Early snow showers in northern Scotland and north Wales, these easing to dry and sunny conditions across the country. Lying snow remains on most slopes above 700-800m, locally lower. A blustery morning, particularly eastern areas where powerful gusts will reach gale force, but easing to fairly small effects widely.

Headline for Peak District

Cold winter sunshine, breezy early; thawing low slopes

How windy? (On the summits)

Northerly 25 to 35mph early morning, but dropping, to 15-20mph during afternoon, later turning northeasterly.

Effect of the wind on you?

Prepare for considerable wind chill in the morning, blustery conditions for a few hours at least, but improving.

How Wet?

No precipitation

Cloud on the hills?

Not expected

Chance of cloud free summits?

Above 90%

Sunshine and air clarity?

Bright sunshine, some thin high cloud approaching later. Superb visibility, a little snow lying on high ground could be very bright.

Temperature (at 600m)

-2 or -1C. Early in day, feeling like -10C directly in the wind, easing.

And in the valleys

About 0C at dawn, frosts likely widespread. Rising to 3C or locally a degree higher on southern aspects, freezing again overnight.

Viewing Forecast For

Peak District
Wednesday 18th February 2026
Last updated Mon 16th Feb 26 at 3:52PM

How windy? (On the summits)

Southeasterly 25-35mph; may rise towards 40mph from the south and strong gusts over highest terrain.

Effect of the wind on you?

Walking often strenuous with wind chill and buffeting challenging stability; a risk of deteriorating conditions.

How Wet?

No precipitation expected

Cloud on the hills?

Variable banks on high tops

Cloud banks come and go over the high summits, some extended clear periods are probable too but always the risk of cloud returning.

Chance of cloud free summits?

70%

Sunshine and air clarity?

Weak sun through high cloud. Very good visibility, some early haze.

Temperature (at 600m)

-1 or -2C. Feeling like -10 to -15C in direct wind.

And in the valleys

Widely frozen from dawn, locally -2C, rising to +2C, locally warmer western valleys.

Viewing Forecast For

Peak District
Thursday 19th February 2026
Last updated Mon 16th Feb 26 at 3:52PM

How windy? (On the summits)

East-southeasterly 30-40mph, gusty over high tops but an easing trend with time, low speeds possible, but detail uncertain.

Effect of the wind on you?

Strenuous-to-arduous walking with wind chill and balance challenges in gusts, but effects easing with time.

How Wet?

Likely no precipitation

A small chance of some light sleet/snow early in the day, but likely entirely dry.

Cloud on the hills?

Likely none

Small risk of early cloud banks shrouding the high tops or high terrain more widely, but this soon breaking and lifting for clear moors.

Chance of cloud free summits?

90%

Sunshine and air clarity?

A mix of high cloud and sun early, trending towards sunnier conditions but always some high cloud around. Good visibility though some haze.

Temperature (at 600m)

About 0C, may rise a degree.

And in the valleys

0 or +1C from dawn, lifting to 4 or 5C.

Planning Outlook

Much terrain frozen midweek, frost into valleys and glens. Strengthening wind on Wednesday with considerable gustiness, gales likely in Wales; possible snow moving into Wales as well, which may move further north but detail is uncertain. Late in the week and through next weekend, a switch to southwesterly winds is expected, bringing a change to milder conditions - lifting above freezing to tops in England and Wales, and generally higher freezing levels in Scotland; periods of thawing likely to Munro summits, though some further snowfall at times on higher Munros during periods of cooler northwesterly wind. Rain most frequent over western hills. Generally windy with upland gales.