Italia Rovente · loading data…
Italia Rovente · loading data…
It was the 2nd hottest June since 1940: 87 years of data, one method, no opinions. Here is where it sits in Italy's climate record.
One stripe per June in the series: blue = colder than the 1961–1990 normal, red = warmer. No other month is mixed in: only June is compared with June.
The dashed line is the underlying trend for this single month.
Top ten, hottest first. The month just ended is in bold.
Values are published to two decimals, and the ranking is computed on those: two months showing the same anomaly share a place. Separating them with finer decimals would be a difference invented by the rounding of the source data.
Each city compared with its own 1961–1990 normal for the same month, and its place in its own historical ranking. Sorted by the highest anomaly.
Copernicus publishes a global and European bulletin every month. This page does not replicate it and does not verify it: it uses the same primary source (ERA5) but a different domain — only the Italian cities monitored here, not a complete geographic area — and a different baseline (Copernicus often uses 1991–2020 or the pre-industrial era). Different numbers don't mean one of the two is wrong: they measure different things. This page's ranking holds for the Italy of our cities, and for nothing else.
Source: ERA5 reanalysis (ECMWF/Copernicus C3S)via Open-Meteo, since 1940. For each city we compute the month's daily mean, then compare it with the 1961–1990 normal of that same calendar month. The national figure above is the average of 36 cities (out of the 107 the site monitors: the monthly history fills in progressively, so this number grows over time). A month enters the comparison only with at least 24 valid days: never a half month passed off as complete.
Data snapshot generated on 2026-07-10.