The southernmost Pennines, covering the entire Peak District National Park, also extending north to hills accessed from Hebden Bridge, and including the hills immediately north of Manchester.
Peak District
Tuesday 10th March 2026
Last updated
Mon 9th Mar 26 at
4:00PM
Patchy rain and lowest cloud over southwest-facing hill groups. Cloud fairly extensive on hills, but higher bases and some breaks northeastwards. Gale-force winds on high terrain, speeds strengthening during day, later becoming widely severe upland gales; heavier rain arrives from west by evening.
Wind strengthening. Cloud lifting above hills, rare local rain.
South to southwesterly; 25 to increasingly 30mph, strengthening further toward sunset, reaching 40mph soon after dark during evening.
Likely to impede ease of walking on higher areas. Becoming increasingly blustery, more arduous conditions from dusk.
Little or no rain
Risk of an isolated brief burst of rain. Rain develops from west later evening into night for a few hours.
Clearing during morning
Cloud shrouds higher slopes for a few hours after dawn, but very likely all clearing before midday.
80% by midday
Patchy sun - cloud fairly extensive over all. Very good or excellent visibility by midday as haze clears.
5C. Feeling like -5C directly in the wind.
5C from dawn, will reach 11 or 12C early afternoon.
Peak District
Wednesday 11th March 2026
Last updated
Mon 9th Mar 26 at
4:00PM
Westerly up to 40mph post dawn; through day dropping slowly, typically 30mph middle of day.
Expect considerable wind chill and walking to be arduous, particularly morning.
Showers
A few rain and hail showers (these mainly northernmost Peak District and north toward Pendle).
Frequently clearing
In precipitation, cloud temporarily forming below 400 to 500m. Otherwise, by midday nearly all cloud above the summits.
80% by midday
Patchwork of sunshine, most sun Peak District east and south of Manchester. Visibility mostly very good or excellent.
3 or 4C. Will feel like -6C directly in the wind.
6C from dawn, 9 or 10C in the afternoon.
Peak District
Thursday 12th March 2026
Last updated
Mon 9th Mar 26 at
4:00PM
Southwesterly 35 to 50mph.
Arduous walking conditions, considerable buffeting and wind chill over exposed terrain.
Risk increasingly heavier rain
Starting largely dry toward south and east at least, patchy rain moving in from northwest. Uncertainty, but risk more persistent and heavier rain developing widely from northwest during day.
Lowering in rain
Banks of cloud most persistent higher and western moors above 500m, may form lower in places toward Lancashire Pennines, particularly in constant rain.
30%
Largely cloudy, but a few hours of brighter skies toward south and east early in day. Rather hazy, becoming poor visibility in rain.
6C, then late in day likely to drop to 2C. Wind chill feeling like -5 to -8C.
8 to 10C, small variation during day, then dropping chillier into evening and night.
Generally unsettled this week and through the upcoming weekend as low pressure systems pass near and north of Britain - strong west or southwesterly winds prevail, often gale-force to at times storm-force over the mountains. Some fluctuation of temperature and freezing level, but mostly below freezing over Scottish mountains, at times snow falling to lower elevations. Colder for all by the end of the week with widely lowering freezing level Thursday into Friday. Frequent precipitation most western mountains, accumulations of snow across the mountains, most substantial in western Scotland from Glencoe northwards. Quieter weather patterns indicated beyond mid-month as higher pressure builds.