Areas north from Knoydart in the west, and the Great Glen towards the east (NB. Does not include Mull and areas west of Loch Linnhe, these are found in the West Highlands forecast.)
The Northwest Highlands
Thursday 25th June 2026
Last updated
Wed 24th Jun 26 at
4:28PM
An even hotter day across the mountains; sunny and humid - risk of sunburn and dehydration. Rain soon arrives into Northwest Highlands, thunderstorms afternoon, later stretching east and south. Moderate breezes, lightest early, strengthening into evening, walking becoming strenuous over high tops.
Afternoon thunderstorms; warm, humid, becoming murky
South to southeasterly between 10 and 20mph; perhaps particularly gusty at times, particularly around thunderstorms where direction may be quite variable.
Generally small, although there may be sudden buffeting at times both on higher areas and some lower slopes.
Rain spreads from the south, turning to thunderstorms later
An area of patchy rain soon moves into southern areas, pushing northward through morning; easternmost Munros only seeing spots of rain in the morning, if anything. Through afternoon, rain becomes more frequent and heavy (sooner Skye) with a rising risk of thunderstorms and extended torrential falls.
Varied, more extensive in and after rain
Varied ragged patches early, more extensive along northern west coast hills. A period of more broken cloud with clear summits is likely, then rain brings fog to hills above 500-700m (chiefly near the coast far north). In thunderstorms, fog extensive, with patches forming from forest canopies upward.
50%
Glimpses of sun through high level cloud. Mostly excellent visibility out of fog and rain, but a general deterioration with time as rain becomes more frequent.
13C rising to 15 or 16C south, but possibly only 13C coastal hills far north; little change with added height. Temperatures in the inland southern glens approaching the mid-20s.
Above the summits.
The Northwest Highlands
Friday 26th June 2026
Last updated
Wed 24th Jun 26 at
4:28PM
Northeasterly trending southeasterly, 10-20mph, notably variable. Gusty around showers and downslope, later to 30mph.
May often be fairly small, but notable buffeting gusts, and beginning to deteriorate later in the day.
Rising risk of thundery showers
Patchy showery rain, some heavy bursts with risk of thunder too. Through afternoon, rising risk of showers clustering together into prolonged thundery downpours. Northern hills may stay largely dry until later.
Fairly extensive
Mountains likely shrouded above 600-700m most of the day, some local higher breaks here and there, notably west coast later. Bases also to lower slopes around heaviest rain, and likely extensive to lower slopes in the early hours as well.
20%
Rare glimpses of weak sun. Variable visibility, often poor due to cloud and rain, locally better.
12 or 13C may start slightly cooler north. Southwest hills/Skye rise to 15C afternoon, staying cool north. Very humid.
Above the summits.
The Northwest Highlands
Saturday 27th June 2026
Last updated
Wed 24th Jun 26 at
4:28PM
Southerly, some uncertainty of peak speed, in range 35mph to possibly 50mph, at least in gusts, most sustained on Cuillin.
Expect strenuous walking conditions, more challenging in places with buffeting gusts knocking you off balance.
Bursts of rain, risk thunder
Some uncertainty, but clusters of heavy showery rain likely tracking northeastward. Drier moments mainly morning in north, but with time increasing risk of sudden downpours widely, thunder and lightning.
Varied, extensive around rain
Varied to fairly extensive cloud banks in the morning, to some lower slopes. Tending to lift with some breaks forming, but then filling in again around rain, ragged patches at varied heights from low levels up.
30%
Occasional glimpses of sun. Some mistiness in morning. Visibility good for periods where dry, but poor around rain.
12 to 14C, small variation all day, then may lower into evening from west. Still rather humid. Feeling cooler directly in wind.
Above the summits.
Exceptionally warm and humid most mountain areas until later Friday; valley temperatures approaching the low-to-middle 30s in England and Wales, with hill temperatures approaching the mid-to-high 20s. Scotland will be slightly cooler, though temperatures will still reach the low 20s on many slopes. A risk of extended torrential thunderstorms on Friday afternoon in northern areas. Thunderstorms may continue in the north on Saturday as well, but progressively less warm as the weekend goes: fronts begin to come in off the Atlantic, bringing a strengthening wind and bands of rain and low cloud, particularly affecting western mountains. Into next week, Atlantic westerlies will dominate with mixed weather.