Weather
Here's What To Expect For June Temperatures In Florida
The Tampa and Miami regions should see slightly average temperatures to start the summer, according to The Weather Company.
FLORIDA — A temperature outlook for June points to an average start to summer in Florida. Only northern parts of the state, from Jacksonville west to the panhandle, could see a cooler than normal kickoff to summer.
In Tampa, the daily high temperature averages 90 degrees in June, with the low temperature increasing from 73 degrees to 75 degrees during the month.
Miami's daily high temperature this month averages 88 degrees, while the low is around 77 degrees.
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The June temperature outlook from The Weather Company and its partner, Atmospheric G2, shows a cooler-than-normal start to summer in areas of the Southwest and above-average temperatures in the far northern tier of U.S. states.
From Georgia north along the East Coast, temperatures lean toward below average, according to The Weather Company. It's possible that this June might be the second-coolest nationwide since 2009, and northern Florida could be part of the trend.
Find out what's happening in Tampafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The expected shift from a La Niña to an El Niño climate pattern is partially influencing temperatures, according to Todd Crawford, the vice president of meteorology at Atmospheric G2 and the author of the outlook.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in March declared the end of a triple-dip La Niña the agency said had worsened drought conditions and increased hurricane activity in Atlantic states.
Crawford said the shift in the temperature pattern that began in May is likely to continue.
“This sudden pattern flip has resulted in the lowest May cooling demand nationally since 2016, and June appears as if it will start relatively cool as well, outside of the northern tier of states,” he said.
Generally, temperatures will be cooler than normal in the Southwest, which typically experiences its hottest weather in June ahead of the monsoon season, according to the outlook.
It also said odds favor a cooler-than-normal start to summer along the East Coast. A high ridge of pressure in place from Canada into the Northern Plains is expected to make for a hot start to summer in the Pacific Northwest to the upper Midwest and much of the Great Lakes.
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