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 22nd February 2026
Last updated
Sat 21st Feb 26 at
4:00PM
Showery southwesterlies, extensively gale force over higher terrain with significant chill factor. Rain and hail, snow falling above 900m in Scotland, most frequent west coastal areas. Fewer showers eastward across Scotland and for England & Wales, with some cloud breaks toward tops.
Upland gales. Showery in west, hail, snow on tops.
Southwesterly 35 to 50mph, frequent squally gusts in showers, at times to 60mph on higher tops.
Challenging conditions over the mountains, frequent buffeting making walking arduous in exposure. Significant wind chill.
Frequent rain, hail, snow high tops
Generally showery, but merging into near-constant precipitation over western mountains, heavy bursts with hail, snow falling mostly above 900m. Risk of isolated thunder, mainly in west. Into night, prolonged heavy precipitation Skye and nearby mainland.
Fairly extensive higher areas
Covering the mountains much of the time above 800 to 1000m, but cloud bases will vary in and out of showers. Occasionally forming to 600m in west. Some breaks higher up inland and east.
20%
Glimpses of sun mostly eastern areas. Visibility occasionally very good, but often reduced by showers, at times poor in west.
1C. Wind chill feeling like -12 to -15C on tops.
1000 to 1100m.
The Northwest Highlands
Monday 23rd February 2026
Last updated
Sat 21st Feb 26 at
4:00PM
West to southwesterly, 50mph from dawn, easing to 30mph or less by late afternoon. Increasing again during evening.
Arduous walking on high terrain in the morning, improving during daytime. Significant wind chill.
Heavy showers in morning fading
Frequent showery precipitation over western areas from before dawn into morning, heavy with hail, snow above 900m. Fading with time to lighter showers, more often dry north/east afternoon. Then heavy rain into night.
Varied over tops, some breaks form
Cloud base varying early in day, often covering higher slopes, patches to 600-700m in west. Tending to lift and break toward upper slopes, but may often cap west coast tops near Skye all day.
30%
Occasional sun breaking through, mostly eastern areas in the afternoon. Hazy, poor around showers, but visibility improving afternoon.
1 or 2C, then rising slightly into night. Feeling like -15C directly in the wind.
1000 to 1100m marginal rise during day, then lifting above the summits into night.
The Northwest Highlands
Tuesday 24th February 2026
Last updated
Sat 21st Feb 26 at
4:00PM
Southwesterly 45 to 60mph, gusts 70mph higher mountains.
Mobility difficult over exposed higher terrain, frequent buffeting at mid-heights. Significant wind chill despite milder air.
Rain heaviest around Skye
Persistent light rain and drizzle, becoming constant heavier rain Skye and up to Torridon. Drier toward Easter Ross. Very wet underfoot western areas.
Extensive, lowest Skye
Shrouding the mountains widely, from lower slopes up around Skye, 600-800m inland and north, highest breaks eastward.
20%
Generally cloudy, murky toward west, poor visibility Skye and nearby coast. Better visibility eastward, but hazy.
3 to 5C. In exposure to wind, feeling like -9 to -12C.
Above all summits with thawing to upper slopes.
West to southwesterly winds prevail during the week ahead as areas of low pressure move toward northwest Scotland whilst ridges of higher pressure occasionally nudge across southern Britain. Sustained gales over the mountains, only brief lulls. Temperatures will fluctuate above and below freezing on higher Scottish mountains, with periods of thaw and refreezing. England and Wales generally above freezing to tops with a substantial thaw of most upland snow. Frequent rainfall, often heavy over western mountains, at times showery with hail, some snow on Scottish Munros. The final days of February favour colder northwesterly air and a drop of freezing level.