Poland Weather

Poland weather is largely determined by the country’s location and surface, although as a general rule it varies between maritime and continental. Poland’s winters are characterized by their tendency to vary from one year to another: sometimes wintertime in Poland is a mild period, and at other the weather turns nasty and cold. The same applies for the summer season, which can be either cool and rainy or hot and dry.


However, and despite the fact that summer is the best time to visit Poland, the country’s dominant sunny disposition is frequently punctuated by rainy spells. July is the hottest month of the year, although with temperatures ranging between 21 to 32 °C, the rest of the summer months don’t fall much behind.


As September rolls in warm temperatures are still dominant, but the further we venture into autumn time, the colder Poland weather becomes. Finally winter sets in as March commences, bring along significant drops in temperature that usually hover between a few degrees bellow zero to an even more freezing - 20 °C. Snow during the winter season (December to March) falls abundantly, and in the high mountain tops overstretches its welcome until the early days of May.