Houston Weather
Bayou City forecasts — humidity included.
Live conditions, the hour-by-hour outlook, severe-weather alerts, and the long-range picture for every Houston neighborhood. Subtropical, but managed.
Weather Forecasts
Latest Houston weather coverage

Hurricane Harvey hit Houston in 2017 with 51 inches of rain and flooded 136,000 homes. Nine years on: the timeline, the human cost, the recovery, and the flood control investments that followed.

Houston floods more than almost any major American city. The complete guide to why it happens, the 2001 Allison and 2017 Harvey events, flood zones, insurance, and how to prepare.

Yes, it snows in Houston — rarely. Here's the climate context: January 2025's historic 4-inch event, the February 2021 freeze, the all-time record, and what to do when it happens.

Houston flood zones are not all created equal. Here is how to read the FEMA map, check your address risk, and what each zone means for insurance.

Hurricane season hits Houston June 1. Here is the local preparation guide — flood zones, evacuation routes, supplies, and the timing that matters.

Houston can expect mild temperatures, high cloud cover, and periods of light rain tomorrow. Winds remain light, and no severe weather is expected.

A warm, damp start to the weekend in Houston gives way to clearer and cooler weather by Sunday.

Houston will see warm temperatures, light breezes, and partly cloudy skies tomorrow. Conditions stay calm with no severe weather expected.

Houston's climate is characterized by its humid subtropical nature, which significantly influences the weather patterns experienced throughout the year. The city experiences hot summers, mild winters, and a significant amount of rainfall, particularly during the spring and fall months. The average temperature in summer can soar above 90 degrees Fahrenheit, with high humidity levels making […]
When the sky turns
Hurricane season runs June through November.
Houston has weathered everything from Alicia to Harvey. The basics: know your evacuation zone, watch the Gulf, and keep the truck topped off.
Our hurricane guide covers shelter routes, contraflow lanes, and the supplies that actually run out first when a storm forms in the Caribbean.

