Fort Worth weather is classified as continental, humid subtropical, and is set apart by broad differences in annual weather conditions. Summers in Fort Worth weather are lengthy and sizzling, while in sharp contrast winters are typically short and rather meek. July is the hottest month of the year, averaging temperatures of between 29 °C to 36 °C during the day, and 23 °C during the evenings. Weather in Fort Worth has occasionally recorded scorching temperatures of 45 °C. 230 days or more of sunshine a year can be expected.
Fort Worth weather is at its coldest during the month of January, with day time temperatures hovering between 6 °C and 13 °C, plummeting to 1 °C during the night. On the occasional severe winter, temperatures in Fort Worth take a nose dive to -21 °C.
Situated in North Texas - actually the 17th largest city in the United States - Fort Worth weather is extremely vulnerable to supercell thunderstorms. Known as “a deep, continuously-rotating updraft”, these thunderstorms generate hefty hail, consequently producing tornadoes but only very rarely tempering Fort Worth weather conditions.
Precipitation levels for May – the wettest month of the year - stand at 116.3 mm, while January, which is by far the driest, only experiences a meager 43.2 mm. Annual precipitation levels are 863.8 mm. Snowfall in Fort Worth is exceedingly light with only 66.0 mm.
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