Wrocław is the fourth-most populous and fifth-largest city in Poland in terms of area. It is situated in three mesoregions: two plains and a glacial valley, and between the hills to the north and the Sudetes to the south. The Oder River and its four tributaries flow through the city. The proximity of the Sudetes causes phenotypic phenomena in Wrocław, where strong, dry winds increase temperatures. This occurs especially in winter – in 1990, this phenomenon caused temperatures to rise by as much as 20 degrees Celsius.
Weather in Wrocław
Wrocław enjoys a moderately warm climate, with a predominant polar maritime and polar continental airflow. The city's climatic conditions are also influenced by the city's characteristics typical of a metropolitan area: higher artificial heat emissions and higher pollution, creating a so-called urban heat island, which can add up to 5 degrees Celsius to the temperature on a clear summer day.
Wroclaw weather - temperature
The average annual temperature in the city is 9.7 degrees Celsius. The lowest monthly temperature, -0.5 degrees Celsius, occurs in January, and the highest, 19.9 degrees Celsius, occurs in July. There are also as many as 47 hot days a year, including frequent tropical nights, during which the temperature does not drop below 20 degrees Celsius. For comparison, there are approximately 22 frosty days per year. The record temperature recorded in Wrocław was 38.9 degrees Celsius (August 2015), while the lowest temperature of -32 degrees Celsius occurred in February 1956. Due to favorable temperatures, the growing season in Wrocław is one of the longest in the country, lasting an average of 251 days.
Weather in Wrocław - precipitation
Average annual rainfall is 588 mm. The most rain falls in July, with up to 79 mm, and the least rainfall falls in February, with 30 mm.