US Trends

what is inclement weather

Inclement weather is any unusually bad or unsafe weather that disrupts normal activities, travel, or work and can pose a risk to people, property, or infrastructure.

What “inclement weather” really means

In everyday and workplace language, inclement weather usually covers:

  • Heavy rain or storms that cause flooding, dangerous driving, or power outages.
  • Snow, ice, or sleet that makes roads, sidewalks, or job sites unsafe.
  • High winds or storms (including hurricanes or severe thunderstorms) that can damage structures or knock down trees and lines.
  • Extreme cold or heat that makes it unsafe to work or be outside for long.
  • Dust storms or similar “abnormal climatic conditions” that sharply reduce visibility or air quality.

A helpful way to think about it: regular bad weather is just unpleasant; inclement weather is unpleasant and disruptive or unsafe.

How the term is used (schools, work, and policies)

Organizations often define inclement weather in their policies because it triggers specific actions:

  • Schools may close or switch to remote learning when roads are icy, snow is heavy, or storms are severe.
  • Employers use an “inclement weather policy” to decide when to close offices, switch to remote work, or modify shifts for employee safety.
  • Construction and outdoor industries treat inclement weather as a formal risk that can stop work, delay timelines, and require extra safety measures.

Typical policy elements include:

  1. What types and levels of weather count as “inclement” in that location (for example, 10 cm of snow vs. a full blizzard).
  1. Who decides when conditions are bad enough to close or adjust operations.
  1. How staff or students are notified (texts, emails, apps, local news).
  1. How pay, remote work, or make‑up days are handled when everything shuts down.

Because climates differ, what counts as inclement in one place might be considered normal in another; for example, a “few inches of snow” might shut one city down but barely affect another.

Common examples of inclement weather

Below is a quick view of weather situations that are often treated as inclement in real-world policies and discussions.

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Weather situation Why it’s “inclement” Typical impact
Heavy rain / thunderstorms Causes flooding, poor visibility, lightning danger.Commute delays, outdoor events canceled, power outages.
Snow, sleet, ice Slippery roads and walkways, low visibility, cold stress.School/work closures, travel bans, accidents rise.
High winds / storms Can topple trees, damage roofs, down power lines.Infrastructure damage, safety hazards, work stoppages.
Extreme heat Risk of heat exhaustion or heatstroke for workers.Outdoor work paused, schedule changes, cooling centers opened.
Extreme cold Frostbite, hypothermia risk, equipment failures.Shortened shifts, indoor work only, closures.
Dust storms / poor air quality Reduced visibility, breathing and health risks.Travel restrictions, outdoor work suspended.

How people talk about it (language and “forum” angle)

In English usage and forum discussions, “inclement weather” is a somewhat formal phrase you’ll see in:

  • Announcements: “Due to inclement weather, the office will be closed today.”
  • Policies and legal documents, especially in HR, construction, and education.
  • Public service messages before big storms or extreme temperature events.

Some language nerds also compare it to “adverse weather”:

  • “Inclement weather” often sounds slightly generic and bureaucratic.
  • “Adverse weather” can imply more severe, damaging conditions, though in practice people more often just say “severe weather,” “storm,” “blizzard,” etc.

A typical forum-style explanation might be:

“If it’s just a gloomy, rainy day, that’s bad weather.
Once it starts shutting things down or making travel unsafe, that’s inclement weather.”

Quick checklist: is it inclement weather?

You can ask yourself:

  1. Is this weather significantly worse than what’s normal for this place and time?
  2. Is it causing cancellations, closures, delays, or serious safety warnings?
  3. Would a school, employer, or event organizer reasonably adjust plans because of it?

If the answer is “yes” to most of those, people will often call it inclement weather.

TL;DR: Inclement weather is unusually severe or unfavorable weather—like heavy storms, snow and ice, high winds, or extreme temperatures—that disrupts normal life and can make it unsafe to travel, study, or work.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.