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
Sunday 4th January 2026
Last updated
Sat 3rd Jan 26 at
3:29PM
Snow, hail, and wind continues driving into northern Scotland with showers passing into central and western areas; snow coverage fairly widespread in the Highlands. Southern Scotland and England mostly sunny, blustery in exposure. More snow and hail showers for Wales, pushing further east afternoon. Widely very cold.
Frequent snow and hail; bitterly cold in the wind
North to northwesterly 30 to 40mph, squally gusts in showers. Speeds trending towards the lower end of the range with time, though stronger gusts will still occur.
Severe wind chill over the mountains. Arduous walking on snow cover with frequent buffeting in exposure much of the day, though slightly easing with time.
Near-constant snow and hail
An ongoing stream of heavy snow showers coming in from the north, falling and accumulating to sea level. Some hail near coasts with risk isolated thunder. Frequent whiteout on the tops.
Most tops shrouded, variably lowering, most persistently north
Cloud base constantly changing, often capping hills near coasts above 800-900m, shafts of cloud to 600m in showers. Brief breaks to upper slopes mostly toward Great Glen/Ben Wyvis.
20%
Brief bursts of sun, most likely from Kintail to Ben Wyvis. Most other areas remain mostly cloudy. Visibility often appalling due to snow falling or blowing and where also in cloud; but intermittently very good.
-7C (to -9C on the high summits). Generally staying a degree higher on Skye/slopes nearest to the coast. Wind chill feeling as cold as -22C in exposure on tops.
Terrain widely frozen, staying sub-zero from glens upward. Nearest the coast, partial thawing in sunlight, up to 200m Skye.
The Northwest Highlands
Monday 5th January 2026
Last updated
Sat 3rd Jan 26 at
3:29PM
Northerly 25-30mph, shifting northwesterly afternoon, risk a brief periods of stronger wind in exposure.
Significant wind chill, severe on high exposed tops where walking conditions will be strenuous with buffeting.
Very frequent snow showers
An ongoing stream of snow showers coming in from the north, snow to sea level; extensive snow cover on the ground with frequent whiteout conditions on high ground. Risk some hail into Sutherland.
Most tops shrouded, variably lowering
Variable cloud base, often capping hills above 800-900m, shafts of cloud to 600m in showers. Some brief breaks to upper slopes though these fleeting. Becoming more extensive from the north after nightfall.
20%
Often cloudy with frequently appalling visibility due to snow falling or blowing. Only brief bursts of sun with very good visibility.
-5C (-8C at dawn in the glens and high tops). Wind chill feeling like -20C in exposure on tops.
Terrain widely frozen. Nearest the coast, partial thawing in sunlight to 200-300m, rising slightly near Skye overnight.
The Northwest Highlands
Tuesday 6th January 2026
Last updated
Sat 3rd Jan 26 at
3:29PM
Changeable: west-southwesterly 20-35mph, trending northerly afternoon and rising, up to 40mph on high exposed tops.
Variable conditions, walking often strenuous with significant wind chill, though some periods of lighter wind possible.
Snow
Showery snow in the west becomes widespread for most of daylight. Increasingly falling as sleet to middle slopes of Skye and the west coast. Breaking back into showers late in the day.
Extensive
Cloud shrouds the hills to middle or lower slopes for most or all of daylight. Some breaks forming in the north around and after dusk as snow turns showery.
10%
Sunshine unlikely. Appalling visibility, whiteout conditions soon widespread and persistent.
-2 to -4C, some variability; trending colder into nighttime. Feeling as cold as -18C in the wind.
Terrain widely frozen from overnight, lifting but variable; up to 700 near Skye, unlikely above 300-400m inland.
Monday stays cold with terrain widely frozen; sunshine inland with continued snow showers along coasts. The weather then turns more variable: fronts begin to approach the country on Tuesday, with cloud gradually becoming widespread on high terrain from the north, an area of snow arriving widely into Scotland and tracking south into England and Wales overnight into Wednesday. Most terrain will stay frozen but a brief local lifting of freezing levels in western areas. Some sunny breaks and snow showers will follow this system. Beyond Wednesday, confidence in forecast detail is significantly lower, but another weather system is indicated for Thursday into Friday, this possibly bringing a swathe of snow, rain, and strong winds to the south and perhaps more widely.