The Summary
- Parts of Arizona, Nevada and New Mexico have been hit by an October heat wave, with temperatures 10 to 20 degrees Fahrenheit above average.
- Phoenix on Tuesday snapped a streak of 21 straight days of record-breaking highs.
- Heat waves are expected to start earlier in the year and last later as a result of climate change, but Phoenix's streak still surprised scientists.
The fall season is in full swing, but people across the Southwest could be forgiven for not noticing.
Parts of Arizona, Nevada and New Mexico have been gripped by an extraordinary heat wave, with unseasonably warm temperatures 10 to 20 degrees Fahrenheit above average stretching into mid-October. The heat is finally expected to break heading into the weekend, as a cold front brings cooler conditions.
Phoenix, in particular, has seemed locked in what feels like a never-ending summer. The city on Tuesday finally snapped a streak of 21 straight days of record-breaking daily high temperatures. From Sept. 24 to Monday, 19 new all-time highs were recorded, and two days tied previous records. All those temperatures were well into the triple digits.
“It’s hard to shock me with this kind of thing, but the weather in Phoenix has just been unbelievable,” said Jennifer Brady, a senior data analyst and research manager at Climate Central, a nonprofit research group headquartered in New Jersey. “When you see those numbers, you think it must be a typo. Even for those of us who follow climate change and know the trends, this is really extraordinary and disturbing.”
On Monday, Phoenix reached a record 103 F, according to the National Weather Service. A week before that, on Oct. 7, the city hit 110 degrees, and the day prior, the high was 113.
The city's extreme temperatures are part of a trend of lengthier and more severe heat waves due to climate change. Such punishing conditions are expected to start earlier in the spring, last later into the fall and generally become far more common in many parts of the country as the world continues to warm.
This summer was already the hottest on record in Phoenix, and 2024 is likely to end up as the warmest year in the city's recorded history. So far, Phoenix has had a total of 70 days with high temperatures at or above 110 degrees, an all-time record that smashed the city’s previous one of 55 days set just last year.
From May 27 to Sept. 16, Phoenix sweltered through 113 consecutive days at or above 100 degrees. Then temperatures again soared into the triple digits at the end of last month.


