Unprecedented Rainfall Drenches Britain
Recent meteorological data reveals January 2026 ranked among the UK’s wettest winter months in recorded history, with nationwide rainfall exceeding long-term averages by 17%. Persistent Atlantic weather systems created exceptionally saturated conditions across much of the country.
Regional Rainfall Disparities
A pronounced north-south divide emerged in England, with southern regions enduring 74% more rainfall than average while northern areas saw just 10% above typical levels. Northern Ireland experienced its wettest January in 149 years with precipitation 70% above normal, while Scotland recorded below-average rainfall.
Several counties broke historical records, including Cornwall and County Down reporting their wettest January since record-keeping began. Multiple locations across Devon, Dorset, and Surrey registered their second-highest January rainfall totals in nearly two centuries of observations.
Storm Events and Temperature Trends
The most significant single-day deluge occurred on January 26 during Storm Chandra, when Katesbridge in County Down received 100.8mm of rainfall – nearly triple the site’s previous daily record. Despite the abundant precipitation, January temperatures averaged 0.5°C below seasonal norms nationwide.
Climate Context and Analysis
This weather pattern follows confirmation that 2025 marked the UK’s hottest year on record, with an average temperature of 10.09°C – 0.96°C above historical baselines. Climate scientists note these extremes align with broader environmental changes.
A Met Office science manager explained: ‘A strong jet stream repeatedly steered low-pressure systems across the UK, creating saturated ground conditions where even moderate rainfall caused significant impacts. This persistent Atlantic weather pattern accounts for the exceptional precipitation totals.’
Climate specialists emphasize these patterns reflect broader environmental shifts. ‘UK temperature records are increasingly being broken in our changing climate,’ stated the head of climate attribution at the national weather service. ‘While not every year will set records, human-induced global warming continues to influence British weather patterns.’

