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when is it supposed to cool down in texas

In Texas right now, it’s expected to stay warmer than “typical winter” for a bit longer, with only brief cool‑downs rather than a big lasting drop in temperatures. Forecast discussions going into early January 2026 describe highs often in the 60s, 70s, and even some 80s in parts of the state, with cold fronts bringing only modest dips before it warms back up again.

Quick Scoop: When Will It Cool Down?

  • In early January 2026, North and Southeast Texas are running about 15–20 degrees warmer than normal, with many afternoons in the upper 60s to 70s and mild nights.
  • Forecasts mention a modest cooldown when weak or “mainly dry” fronts pass through, usually knocking highs back into the 60s for a short time before warmth returns.
  • Longer-range outlooks suggest a shift back toward more typical winter weather sometime in mid-January, but the exact day and how strong the cool-down will be are still uncertain.

In plain terms: expect “springlike” warmth and only short-lived cool snaps for now, with a better chance of more seasonable chilly weather as you get deeper into January.

Regional Flavor: Why It Feels So Warm

  • Dallas–Fort Worth and much of North Texas started 2026 with highs in the low to mid‑70s, versus normal January highs in the 50s.
  • Around Houston and the upper Texas coast, highs in the upper 70s and lows near 50–60 degrees are being called “gorgeous but not very January‑like.”

Texans online are joking that it feels more like April than January, and some local discussions even reference “April weather in January” and no big Arctic blast on the immediate horizon.

What To Expect Next Few Weeks

While exact dates vary by city, a rough pattern looks like this:

  1. Next several days
    • Warm days in the 60s–70s (some 80s in South Texas) and mild nights.
    • Only light rain chances and no major winter storms showing up in the very near term.
  1. Around mid-January
    • Pattern may trend closer to normal winter: cooler days, colder nights, and better chances for stronger fronts.
 * Forecasters are cautious: timing and intensity of any real cold snap are still not locked in.
  1. Typical Texas twist
    • Online Texas communities keep reminding people that serious cold often shows up later in winter (January–February), even after long warm stretches.

Forum & Trending Talk

  • Forum threads across Texas often read like: “It’s already too hot” in summer and “This doesn’t even feel like winter” in years like this.
  • A common Texas joke in these discussions is: “If you don’t like the weather, wait a minute,” with people recalling past February freezes that arrived after weeks of warmth.

So if you’re waiting for it to really cool down in Texas, the current signals point to more short, front‑driven cool‑downs over the next week or so, with a better shot at genuinely colder, more wintry stretches as you move toward mid to late January. Exact dates will depend on your specific city, so checking a local 7–10 day forecast for your area (Dallas, Houston, Austin, San Antonio, etc.) will give the most accurate timing.

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