Skip to main content
Clear icon
46º

Heat continues to tackle Houston Sunday

Hot, Dry and Foggy: the heat isn’t going anywhere!

Cool start with chance for some fog. Heating up by game-time.
Saturday’s Temperature Recap:

HOUSTON – Saturday, we fell a degree short of tying a record. Saturday’s high was 91, but the record is 92, set back in 2010. The above-average heat will continue as we close out October.

Recommended Videos



Above average heat for late October the average temperature is 80 degrees.

If we don’t get rain before Friday we’ll go down as the driest October on record for Houston. This is looking unlikely since rain is expected Wednesday and Thursday.

Hot October data (Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston - All rights reserved.)
Dry October (Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston - All rights reserved.)
Sunday’s forecast:

No changes to the forecast Sunday. If you like dry warm weather, this is your weekend. Texans tailgating feels nice. We should be well shy of reaching the record of 94° from 2010.

Cool start with chance for some fog. Heating up by game-time.
Staying above average in the upper 80s and low 90s.
Next Chance of rain:

We really need rain. It looks like our weather pattern is going to make a major change toward the middle and end of next week. We could get rain as early as Wednesday and it’s possible our Trick or Treating weather may be wet.

Rain chances increase starting Wednesday

Tracking the Tropics:

There is no tropical development expected in the next seven days. There may be something that forms in the Caribbean in a week and a half. Hurricane season runs through November 30th.

No development is expected in the next seven days. (Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston - All rights reserved.)

10-day Forecast:

A weather change up Wednesday through the start of November. Although it would be a bummer for trick-or-treaters, any rainfall would be beneficial.

Sunny and hot start to a rainy and slightly cooler late week forecast.

About the Author
Anthony Yanez headshot

Chief meteorologist and recipient of the 2022 American Meteorological Society’s award for Excellence in Science Reporting by a Broadcast Meteorologist.

Loading...