Europe braces for significant summer heatwave with record temperatures expected
Quick Look
- Western Europe, including Portugal, Spain, France, and the UK, is preparing for a major heat event with temperatures forecast to exceed 30C, potentially setting new May records.
- A heat dome is blamed for the premature and intense heat.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
Western Europe is facing its first significant heat event of the summer, with temperatures expected to be well above average and potentially set new monthly records for May. This is attributed to a heat dome caused by hot air from Morocco trapped under a high-pressure system.
A large swathe of western Europe is bracing for the first significant heat event of the summer, with temperatures forecast to rise to more than 10C above the norm and new monthly records for May expected to be set in possibly hundreds of places.
Temperatures across Portugal, Spain, France and the UK were expected to exceed 30C (86F) on Friday and into next week, reaching 32C in Paris and London and 35C in south-west France, with highs of up to 38C in the Guadiana and Guadalquivir regions of Spain.
“Both maximum and minimum temperatures are likely to reach unprecedented levels for the season in multiple regions, particularly the south-west, during a premature heat event that will be intense and last several days,” said Météo-France.
The French national weather forecaster said records were almost certain to be set for the highest May temperature recorded in France (30.5C in 2025), and the highest average temperature across the country on a day in May (22.8C in 2017).
It said the exceptional temperatures, likely to exceed previous records by three or four degrees in some cities such as Nantes and Brest, were caused by a heat dome, with hot air from Morocco trapped under the high pressure of a powerful anticyclone.
Météo-France said the temperatures expected in Brittany in particular were “quite remarkable so early in the pre-summer season”, and likely to exceed existing records by as many as three or more degrees.
It said climate breakdown meant that Europe, the world’s fastest-warming continent, could expect such exceptional heat events “more and more often and more and more prematurely, and to be more and more intense”.
The Met Office said temperatures in the UK, where “extraordinary” heat health alerts have been issued for the weekend, could reach 33C locally on Monday, exceeding the current highest temperature recorded in May of 32.8C, set in 1944.
Parts of the UK could also enter a heatwave, with temperatures exceeding 26C to 28C – depending on the location – for three days. That is unlikely in France, where night-time temperatures must also stay above a certain level for an official heatwave to be declared, or Spain, where temperatures would have to reach high summer levels.
In Spain, where temperatures already reached 38C on Thursday, a two-year-old girl died in the north-west region of Galicia after accidentally being left in her father’s car for hours.
The state meteorological office, Aemet, said the hot spell was expected to stretch well into next week and could bring record May temperatures. “Full-on summer heat is the phrase that best describes the weather we’ll see across most of Spain over the coming days,” said Aemet spokesperson Rubén del Campo.
“Temperatures will be between 5C and 10C above the seasonal average – and 10C above average for the time of year in northern regions. These are the kind of temperatures we normally see in July and August.”
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
New monthly records for May will be set in possibly hundreds of places.
Very likely · Within days
Parts of the UK could enter a heatwave.
Likely · Within days
Exceptional temperatures will exceed previous records by three or four degrees in some cities such as Nantes and Brest.
Very likely · Within days
Open Questions
- What specific long-term impacts will this premature heat event have on European ecosystems and agriculture?
- Are there any specific public health advisories or measures being implemented beyond heat health alerts?
- What is the expected duration of this heatwave beyond 'several days' or 'well into next week'?
- What are the precise mechanisms and timelines for how climate breakdown exacerbates such events?





