You’re asking “when is the weather going to warm up” , but I don’t have live access to location-specific forecasts right now, so I can’t give an exact date for your area.

Still, here’s how you can quickly get a realistic answer and what to look for.

How to check when it will warm up

Use any major weather app or site for your town or postcode and check:

  • The 10–14 day forecast for daily highs and lows; this shows the next noticeable warm spell.
  • Any “unusual temperature” or “climate insights” section if available; some services highlight coming warmer-than-normal periods.
  • The temperature trend graph over the next week; if each day’s high is a bit higher, a warm-up is starting.

A practical rule of thumb: when daytime highs stay in the “light jacket” range for 3–4 days in a row (often around the teens °C / 50s–60s °F in many places), most people experience that as “warming up.”

Why it can feel suddenly warmer

Even small changes can feel big after a cold spell:

  • A jump of 5–10 degrees after a long cold stretch often feels like a real warm-up, even if it’s still objectively cool.
  • Sunshine, less wind, and drier air can make the same temperature feel much more comfortable than a grey, windy day.

For example, in some regions, around 60°F (about 16°C) can feel surprisingly warm after winter, and people start switching to lighter clothes and cold drinks.

Quick checklist for your own forecast

When you open your weather app, look for:

  1. The first day where the high jumps noticeably above recent days (e.g., from 5–7°C to 12–15°C, or from 40s to high 50s °F).
  1. A run of 3+ days near or above that new, milder temperature.
  1. Fewer icons showing snow/steady rain and more showing sun or partial clouds.

Once you see that pattern line up, that’s your realistic answer to “when is the weather going to warm up” for your exact location.

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