Summer in Montréal 2026: A Slow Start, a Possible July of Records, and the El Niño Pivot

Seasonal Forecast & Climate

Summer in Montréal 2026: A Slow Start, a Possible July of Records, and the El Niño Pivot

Two competing forecasts. One says July could break heat records. The other says the season starts cool and unsettled. The data behind both — plus the long-term trend that has Montréal’s summers running 1.5°C warmer than they did mid-century — points to a high-volatility season with hot peaks and unpredictable middles.

Period: June – August 2026 Sources: MétéoMédia, Old Farmer’s Almanac, ECCC Station: Montréal-Trudeau (CYUL)
26.7°C
July Avg High (Normal)
+1.5°C
Summer Warming Since 1948
66
Deaths in 2018 Heat Wave
61%
Chance of El Niño by July

After a cold, slow spring 2026, Montrealers are mentally counting down the days to consistent summer warmth. The forecasts disagree on how the season will actually unfold — but they agree on one thing: July is loaded.

Here’s what the data says about Montréal’s 2026 summer, the climate baseline it’s running against, and the historical context that frames the whole season.

Two Competing Forecasts (and Why That Matters)

Two of the most-watched seasonal forecasts for Quebec are pointing in opposite directions for early summer 2026 — which itself is a useful piece of information about the season’s likely volatility.

Forecast A — Old Farmer’s Almanac (Canadian Edition)
“July Could Break Heat Records”

Warmer-than-usual summer for southern Quebec, with below-normal rainfall in the east. Hot periods bookending July (late June through early July, then again July 24–31), with another major heat push in mid-August (Aug 12–16). The Almanac flags El Niño as a “thermal amplifier” driving the pattern.

Forecast B — MétéoMédia / The Weather Network
“Eastern Canada May Endure a Rocky, Changeable Summer”

El Niño historically pushes warmth toward Western Canada and leaves the East cooler and more unsettled. The “felt summer” — the point when Montréal settles into 23–25°C territory — could arrive later than usual. Comparable El Niño years (2009, 2015, 2023) all delivered rough, disappointing starts to Quebec summer.

The reconciliation: Both forecasts can be right. A cool, slow June followed by a hot, dry July and August is exactly the pattern El Niño tends to deliver to eastern Canada. Expect a sluggish start, then sustained heat from mid-July onward.

The 2026 Outlook in One Page

Month Temp Outlook Precipitation Risk Watch
JuneCool, unsettled start; warmer late monthNear to above normalSevere thunderstorms possible
JulyAbove normal; potential heat recordsBelow normal in eastHeat wave; wildfire smoke; AQI alerts
AugustAbove normal; mid-month heat surgeFrequent storms after Aug 17Tropical-system remnants (echoes of 2024)

Cool June. Hot July. Volatile August. Bring sunscreen and a backup plan.

What “Normal” Looks Like in a Montréal Summer

Before any forecast, the baseline. Here’s what a typical Montréal summer delivers, based on Environment Canada’s climate normals at Montréal-Trudeau (CYUL).

Metric June July August
Average daily high24.2°C26.7°C25.7°C
Average daily low13.8°C16.7°C15.6°C
Rainfall (mm)84 mm91 mm85 mm
Days with precipitation~12~12~11
Sunshine (hours)240 h272 h240 h
Avg humidity65%67%69%
Avg wind speed14.2 km/h13.6 km/h10.9 km/h

Three things stand out. July is Montréal’s sunniest month — 272 hours of sunshine, the city’s annual peak. August is the calmest at just 10.9 km/h average wind. And critically, summer is statistically the wettest season in Montréal — June, July, and August each deliver more rain than any non-summer month.

The First 30°C Day — Year-Over-Year

If spring’s milestone is the first 20°C day, summer’s is the first 30°C — the genuine “is the AC on yet?” threshold. Here’s how recent years have lined up.

First 30°C Day in Montréal — Year-Over-Year
2020
May 27
2024
June 17
2023
June 28
2025
June 23
2022
July 6
Long-term avg
~June 28

2020’s May 27 remains the all-time earliest 30°C+ day in Montréal’s 137-year record. The mercury hit 36.6°C that day, with parts of the West Island reaching 37°C. For 2026, both forecasts point to a relatively late first 30°C — likely late June or early July — followed by a heat-loaded mid-summer.

The Heat Wave Decade Trend

The number of days that hit or exceed 30°C in a Montréal summer has more than doubled since the 1980s. This is the trend that drove the 2018 disaster, and it’s the trend the city’s public health system is now actively planning around.

30°C+ Days per Summer in Montréal — by Decade
1980s
~9
1990s
~11
2000s
~13
2010s
~18
2020–25
~22

Approximate annual counts based on Environment Canada daily climate records.

Memorable Montréal Summers — The Records

August 1, 1975
Hottest Day Ever Recorded — 37.6°C
The all-time high temperature in Montréal’s 137-year climate record. Pre-air-conditioning city, downtown station. The all-time record has stood for 51 years. Bonus: the date is exactly one calendar year before the 1976 Olympic Closing Ceremony.
Summer 1992
The Summer That Never Reached 30°C
The only summer at Montréal-Trudeau Airport on record where the temperature failed to cross 30°C. The yearly maximum was 29.6°C. Driven by the global cooling effect of the 1991 Mount Pinatubo volcanic eruption.
June 30 – July 8, 2018
The Heat Wave That Killed 66 Montrealers
Daily highs hit 35.5°C with humidex values reaching 45°C. Critically, nighttime lows stayed above 20°C for seven consecutive nights. Public Health investigated 66 heat-related deaths on the island of Montréal. 80% died at home; 66% lived inside identified urban heat islands. Summer 2018 went on to register as the hottest in 146 years of Quebec records.
May 27, 2020
Earliest 35°C+ Day Ever — 36.6°C
The mercury hit 36.6°C at Montréal-Trudeau in May — earlier than any year in the city’s 137-year record. The same day, parts of the West Island reached 37°C with humidex values exceeding 42°C.
June 2023
The Smoke-Choked Month
Montréal’s air quality index briefly became the worst in the world in late June 2023, as Quebec wildfire smoke blanketed the city. The Air Quality Health Index hit 10+ (“Very High Risk”) on multiple days. Schools cancelled outdoor activities, and the marathon training calendar of every running club in the city was effectively erased.
August 9, 2024
Hurricane Debby’s 145 mm Day
The remnants of Hurricane Debby parked over Montréal and dropped 145 mm of rain on the downtown core in 24 hours — the rainiest single day in the city’s recorded history. Highways flooded, the Métro shut down sections, and roughly 200,000 buildings reported water damage. The previous one-day rainfall record had stood for over 60 years.

The Heat Wave Watch — What Quebec’s Public Health System Defines as “Extreme”

Quebec’s INSPQ (Institut national de santé publique) uses a clinical definition of “extreme heat wave” tied to mortality risk. For Montréal, the threshold is three consecutive days where the 3-day weighted moving average reaches at least 33°C maximum and 20°C minimum. Once that threshold trips, the city activates community-based outreach to identified high-risk individuals.

Heat Wave Threshold What Triggers
Heat WarningDaytime high ≥ 31°C with humidex ≥ 40°C — issued by ECCC
Extreme Heat Event (INSPQ)3 days at 33°C max + 20°C min (3-day moving average)
Tropical NightNighttime low does not drop below 20°C — the metric that drives mortality
Hot DayDaytime maximum ≥ 30°C — used for trend tracking

The metric that matters most for health is tropical nights — the count of days where overnight temperature stays above 20°C. The 2018 wave’s mortality was driven primarily by seven consecutive tropical nights, not the daytime peak. Bodies couldn’t recover overnight. With the 2026 forecast pointing to a hot, dry late July, that’s the metric to watch.

The Wildfire Smoke Question

Wildfire smoke has become a defining feature of Canadian summers since 2023. Montréal experienced its worst air-quality stretch on record that June; 2024 and 2025 each delivered multiple smoke events. The 2026 risk profile depends on continental fire activity, which depends in turn on Western Canadian drought conditions, which is itself driven by the same El Niño signal that’s expected to deliver Montréal’s summer heat.

Recent Canadian Wildfire Seasons (Area Burned)
2023
~150,000 km²
2025
~98,000 km²
2024
~52,000 km²
10-yr avg
~27,000 km²

For Montréal specifically, the practical implication is that summer “smoke season” — once a peak-summer concern in late July or August — now reliably starts in June. Monitoring the AQHI (Air Quality Health Index) is no longer optional for residents with respiratory conditions, marathon trainees, or anyone who works outdoors.

Festival Season & What Summer Does to Montréal

Summer is when Montréal compresses an entire year of outdoor culture into about 14 weeks. The 2026 forecast suggests the most reliable festival weather will land in late July and early August.

Canadian Grand Prix
Mid-June at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve. June weather can be cool and unsettled — a wet race is possible given June’s slow start.
Jazz Fest
Late June to early July. The forecast’s late-month June warm-up should align well with peak Jazz Fest weekends.
Just for Laughs
Mid-to-late July. Likely lands in the hottest stretch of summer per current forecasts. Indoor venues will be in demand.
Osheaga
First weekend of August at Parc Jean-Drapeau. Forecast suggests warm and mostly dry, with thunderstorm risk after Aug 17.
Pride / Mural
Pride is early August; Mural Festival in early-mid June. Both should align with favorable weather windows.
Piknic Électronik
Sundays, May–September. Forecast suggests June Sundays may underperform; July and August should hit the brief.
Tam-Tams
Sunday afternoons on Mont-Royal. The Mother’s Day to Labour Day window will be strongest in late July.
Public Pools
Most Montréal pools open mid-June and close Labour Day. With heat-loaded mid-summer, expect peak demand mid-July.

A Practical Summer 2026 Checklist for Montrealers

When What
Early JuneTest your AC. Watch for thunderstorm risk. Don’t trust early-June forecasts to deliver — pack a sweater for outdoor events.
Late JuneWatch for the first sustained 30°C+ stretch. Sign up for SUPREME / ECCC heat alerts if you haven’t already.
Early-mid JulyHeat-loaded period. Stock electrolytes. Identify your nearest cooling centre. Check on elderly neighbours during 3+ day extreme heat events.
July 24–31Per the Almanac forecast, this is the most likely window for record-breaking heat. Watch AQHI for wildfire smoke compounding.
Mid-AugustSecond heat surge expected. Aug 12–16 forecast as sunny and very hot. Plan outdoor exercise for early morning or after 7 PM.
Late AugustStorm season. Watch for tropical-system remnants — the Hurricane Debby playbook. Clean out roof drains and flood-risk basements.

The Big Picture for Montréal

Summer 2026 in Montréal is shaping up to be high-volatility: a slow June, a potentially record-hot July, and a stormy, transitioning August. The El Niño signal is the unifying theme — its tendency to push warmth to western Canada early then shift it east as the season progresses fits the forecast pattern almost perfectly.

Underneath the year-to-year noise, the trend is clear and accelerating. Montréal’s number of 30°C+ days has more than doubled since the 1980s. Tropical nights — once a rarity — are now an annual event. Wildfire smoke has joined heat as a dominant summer health concern.

The August 9, 2024 single-day rainfall record (145 mm) was set by a tropical-system remnant; climate models suggest the new record won’t last 60 years like the old one did.

For 2026 specifically: the practical translation is that Montréalers should expect a summer where the heat peaks higher and earlier than the season average suggests, with the chance of a memorable extreme event (heat record, smoke episode, or tropical-system rainfall) before September.

Bottom line: A patient June. A hot July. A volatile August. The summer Montréal compresses an entire year of outdoor culture into is now genuinely shorter at the edges and hotter in the middle than it was 30 years ago — and 2026’s forecast leans into that shape harder than usual.
Data Sources
  1. Environment and Climate Change Canada — Historical climate data for Montréal-Trudeau (CYUL); 2026 global mean temperature forecast (January 2026).
  2. MétéoMédia / The Weather Network — Summer 2026 outlook for Eastern Canada.
  3. Old Farmer’s Almanac (2026 Canadian Edition) — Southern Quebec summer forecast, including Almanac.com regional breakdown for July and August.
  4. NOAA Climate Prediction Center — ENSO and El Niño emergence forecasts for May–July 2026.
  5. Institut national de santé publique du Québec (INSPQ) — 2018 heat-wave mortality investigation; SUPREME monitoring system.
  6. Wikipedia (cross-referenced with primary sources) — Geography of Montreal climate records; 2018 North American heat wave.
  7. Natural Resources Canada — Canadian Wildland Fire Information System (2023–2025 burned area).
  8. Climates to Travel and climate-data.org — Climate normals for Montréal June–August.

Frequently asked questions

What will Montreal summer 2026 weather be like?

Environment Canada’s seasonal forecast for Montreal summer 2026 points to a slow June start (cool, wet — likely 5-10 percent above normal precipitation), followed by a possibly record-setting July driven by an El Nino-to-La Nina pivot. August expected near normal with elevated humidity.

How hot does Montreal get in summer?

Average July high: 26C, low 16C. Extreme highs hit 35-37C during heatwaves (2018, 2022, 2024 saw multiple). Humidex regularly pushes perceived temperatures into the 40s. The all-time high is 37.6C set August 1, 1975.

When does Montreal summer start and end?

Meteorologically, summer is June 1 to August 31. Climatologically Montreal summer “starts” when average temperatures reliably exceed 18C — usually June 5-10. “Ends” around September 10-15. Terrasse season (warm enough for outdoor dining) typically May 15 to October 1.

Is El Nino affecting Montreal weather in 2026?

Yes. The transition from a moderate El Nino (2024-2025) to neutral or La Nina conditions (mid-2026) is expected to create a bifurcated summer: cool wet first half, hot dry second half. Similar patterns last occurred in 1998 and 2010.

How much does Montreal rain in summer?

Average summer precipitation: 280mm across June-August. July is wettest (95mm), June second (90mm), August driest (85mm). Most rainfall comes in short thunderstorms rather than steady multi-day systems.