Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

March 2025 Regional Temperature and Precipitation Impacts and Outlooks

Graphic with NOAA logo in the center and the outlines of thirteen different regions and subregions of the United States above it. Text “Regional Temperature and Precipitation Impacts and Outlooks”.
Courtesy of NOAA NCEI

NOAA and its partners have released the latest Regional Reports and Outlooks, which recap winter 2024 conditions and provide insight into what might be expected this spring 2025. 

Winter 2025 Temperature Recap

The average temperature over the contiguous U.S. (CONUS) for meteorological winter (December–February) was 34.1°F, 1.9°F above average, ranking in the warmest third of the winter record. Winter temperatures were near- or above-average across most of the country, and much above average across the Southwest.

Alt text: Map of the United States depicting Mean Temperature Percentiles from December–February 2024.

Winter 2025 Precipitation Recap

The total precipitation averaged over CONUS for winter was 5.87 inches, 0.92 inch below average, ranking in the driest third of the December-February record. Winter precipitation was above average across portions of the Northwest and northern Plains, and from the central Mississippi Valley to the Mid-Atlantic Coast. However, much of the rest of the contiguous U.S. experienced below to much-below-average precipitation, particularly in the Southwest where Arizona and New Mexico had their second-driest winter season on record.

Alt text: Map of the United States depicting Total Precipitation Percentiles from December–February 2024.

Spring 2025 Temperature Outlook

The April-May-June (APJ) 2025 seasonal outlook favors above-normal temperatures for the southern half and eastern one-third of the contiguous U.S. (CONUS) as well as for the Alaska Peninsula and adjacent areas of the southern Mainland and eastern Aleutians. The greatest odds are forecast in the Southwest, southern Plains and bottom two thirds of the Florida Peninsula. Below-normal seasonal mean temperatures are most likely for a small area of west-central Alaska.

Map of the United States depicting the Seasonal Temperature Outlook for April–June 2025.

Spring 2025 Precipitation Outlook

The APJ 2025 precipitation outlook forecasts elevated probabilities for below-normal seasonal total precipitation amounts for much of the western U.S. and the central and southern High and Great Plains. The highest odds are centered just north of the Four Corners region. Above-normal precipitation is favored for the southern Great lakes and Ohio Valley. In Alaska, above-normal precipitation is most likely for the northern and much of the western areas of the state while drier-than-normal conditions are favored for coastal south-central Alaska.

Alt text: Map of the United States depicting the Seasonal Precipitation Outlook for April–June 2025.

Impacts and Outlooks for Your Region

Get more details for your region in the March 2025 temperature and precipitation impacts and outlooks summaries:

Prairies and High Plains Region
Gulf Coast Region
Alaska and Northwestern Canada Region 
Great Lakes Region
Gulf of Maine Region
Mid-Atlantic Region
Midwest Region
Missouri River Basin Region
Northeast Region
Pacific Region
Southeast Region
Southern Region
Western Region

You can access all of the Temperature and Precipitation Impacts and Outlooks summaries as well as additional reports and assessments through the U.S. Drought Portal Reports web page at Drought.gov.