Mapped: Where might the UK’s fourth heatwave of the summer hit?

The hot spots in the east and southeast of England can record a heat wave in the coming days – this summer fourthly warns predictions for some articles.
Days after confirming that the Met Office has become the norm and rainfall, the experts say Mercury can show 28C or 29C in these regions on Thursday and Friday.
At the weekend, since the third heat wave of 2025 sweeps England, record -breaking temperatures exceeded 30 ° C in several parts of the country. Ross-on-Wye, Herefordshire and Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales recorded the highest days of 33 ° C.
Most of the UK lived a short Reprieve from hot weather on Tuesday, and then on Wednesday, the temperatures began to crawl into the highest centigar of the 20s again.
Meteorologist Tom Morgan said: “From a technical point of view, some places have the potential to reach the heat wave.
“But it will not be like the last heat wave that sees that temperatures reach high 20s or 30s.
“Currently, we expect 29C temperatures in Southeast England on Thursday and Friday, then it may be 28C or the like on Saturday.
“Probably a few individual air stations that reach a heat wave criteria … But this will not be for everyone, there will be a small minority of places with a technical heat wave.”
The definitions of a heat wave vary according to the district. The air is considered as a heat wave when the temperatures meet or exceed the heat wave temperature threshold for that location.
From Cambridgeshire to West Berkshire and Surrey, the threshold is 29C. Northern England, Scotland and Wales in most 25c.
According to the temporary Met Office statistics, as the records continued to be determined this year, the UK was the hottest June, and the UK has generally experienced the second most hot since the start of the series in 1884.
Estimators say that the rest of July and the rest of August can be changed. However, towards the middle of August, there are temporary signs that high pressure may be more dominant, Met Office, more dry, settled air.
“Temperatures are expected to continue to work on average in general with a greater possibility of very hot or hot spells that will develop in mid -August, especially in the south and east compared to a few weeks.”
After the most dry spring of England since 1893, about seven million people are facing Hosepipe bans.
South water restrictions affecting Hampshire and Wight Island will begin on Monday, while Thames Water announced a prohibition for customers in some parts of Oxfordshire, Gloucestershire, Wiltshire and Berkshire on Tuesday.
South East Water also said that 1.4 million customers will be banned from using Hosepipes in Kent and Sussex.
The first prohibition in Yorkshire entered into force on Friday after it was declared a “drought” in the region.
The Environmental Agency warned that it will follow more forbidden without significant rain.
Western and East Midlands, Kingshire and Lancashire, Yorkshire and Greater Manchester and Mersexide and Cheshire were proclaimed.
Lincolnshire, Northamponshire, East Angliia and Thames are identified as “long -term dry air ..
However, on Thursday, in the west of England, estimators will be rain outbreaks, some of them are intense and thunder thunderstorms are possible.




