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.
Peak District
Monday 2nd February 2026
Last updated
Sun 1st Feb 26 at
4:26PM
Strong and gusty east-southeasterlies, gale-force in places, speeds generally increasing over England & Wales with time. Snow frequent or persistent for eastern Scottish hills, rain lower ground; whiteout over higher areas with blanket cloud. Largely dry west coasts with higher and more broken cloud.
Strengthening gusty wind. Low cloud, drizzly rain.
Easterly 25-30mph, gradually rising to 30-35mph afternoon, 40mph from dusk.
Increasingly uncomfortable walking over higher terrain, strenuous with considerable wind chill in exposure, gusts affecting balance particularly late in day.
Patchy rain
Drizzle or light rain affecting many hills on-and-off, totals small, but feeling generally damp where in cloud.
Fairly extensive
Mostly covering high terrain with bases regularly to middle slopes in the east, higher bases westward, but often covering higher moors. Local breaks may occur west toward Lancashire.
20%
Largely cloudy and dull, or misty over hills. Poor visibility and hazy east, better west of high moors.
2C, then nearer 0C after dark. Feeling like -7 to -10C with time in the wind.
3 to 5C, small variation night into day.
Peak District
Tuesday 3rd February 2026
Last updated
Sun 1st Feb 26 at
4:26PM
Easterly 25 to 35mph, very gusty in places around exposed tops, edges and some downslopes to west.
Blustery, strenuous walking over higher moors, gusts may affect balance; considerable wind chill.
A little light snow on tops
Most likely small amounts of precipitation, intermittent drizzle, or snow flurries above 400-500m. Risk becoming more persistent over east and southern hills, particularly later in the day, more widely into evening.
Fairly extensive higher areas
Covering much higher terrain above 500-600m, perhaps lower if precipitation persists. Higher bases westwards.
30%
Largely overcast, dull, locally brighter further west. Hazy, poor visibility in rain/snow.
0 or -1C. Wind chill feeling like -8 to -12C.
3 or 4C, small change night into day.
Peak District
Wednesday 4th February 2026
Last updated
Sun 1st Feb 26 at
4:26PM
South to southeasterly 20 to 25mph.
Fairly small effect on walking, but feeling blustery and chilly in more exposed spots.
A little rain fading
Rain from overnight leaving drizzle after dawn, tending to fade out.
Extensive, may improve
Low cloud shrouding the hills widely from mid or some lower slopes upward early in day. Gradual improvement with rising bases, may start to break up to tops.
40%
Largely overcast, dull and misty start, but may improve with some brighter skies and good visibility developing below cloud.
1C rising to 3C. Wind chill feeling like -5C.
3C rising to 7C.
Easterly winds prevail this week, strong to gale force over many hills for sustained periods. Freezing levels will vary, but in the Highlands rarely above 800m away from the west coast, at times sub-zero from 400-500m upward. In England and Wales only occasionally dropping below 600m, and at times just above freezing to high tops. Further snow focused on eastern Scottish mountains, with additional accumulations and drifting; very little further west. Some periods of hill snow for England and Wales during midweek. Cold easterly patterns are expected to continue onward into mid February, though higher pressure to the north may see reduced precipitation amounts, always driest with highest cloud in west.