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Home » Why does it rain every darn weekend? – UK Times
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Why does it rain every darn weekend? – UK Times

By uk-times.com29 May 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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Why does it rain every darn weekend? – UK Times
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The latest headlines from our reporters across the US sent straight to your inbox each weekday

Your briefing on the latest headlines from across the US

Your briefing on the latest headlines from across the US

Evening Headlines

It doesn’t actually rain every weekend. That would be insane.

But many parts of the southern and eastern U.S. have seen their beach trips and picnics upended this spring due to a spate of weekend storms, making it seem as though each weekend is a washout lately.

The Memorial Day holiday weekend was the wettest Burlington, Vermont, had seen in over a century, according to WCAX. And in Beeville, Texas, flooding rain forced water rescues. Many social media users posted desperate messages of woe, lamenting their spoiled fun. “Death. Taxes. Austin Memorial Day Rain,” Texas user @EvilMopacATX wrote on the platform X.

Experts don’t believe weekends actually attract more rain, it’s simply that there is an increased chance of rainstorms this hot and humid time of year — and we may notice the downpour more when it’s on a day off.

So what is actually driving these Saturday and Sunday storms?

“I believe the issue with rain on holiday weekends is simply luck of the draw,” Steve Decker, an associate professor at Rutgers University said, explaining the increasingly frequent sight of beach lifeguards in rain gear.
“I believe the issue with rain on holiday weekends is simply luck of the draw,” Steve Decker, an associate professor at Rutgers University said, explaining the increasingly frequent sight of beach lifeguards in rain gear. (AFP/Getty)

Some have posited on social media that city air pollution, human-caused climate change and even cloud seeding are responsible for the frequent soggy weekends. But the reasons for weekend rain in the U.S. have been different from month to month, AccuWeather senior meteorologist Paul Pastelok told The Independent.

Over Memorial Day weekend, it was an upper-level area of high pressure that produced a lot of moisture.

“And so, everything was going from Texas through Missouri, Illinois, Ohio and then getting into the east and even parts of the Southeast ended up getting into a little bit of a rainfall as well,” Pastelok said.

In previous weeks, there was a different explanation.

The polar jet stream — narrow bands of wind that blow around the planet from west to east — was pushing storm systems from the northeastern Pacific region through the Northwest and into the Ohio Valley.

Areas with recent rainy weekends, like the Northeast, were in a “sweet spot,” he explained.

Experts say weekend storms – even those that seem to hit every weekend – really just come down to luck
Experts say weekend storms – even those that seem to hit every weekend – really just come down to luck (Getty Images)

“Timing wise, I can’t explain that. It just seems like we got into a funk that everything wanted to come on weekends and spoil things,” said Pastelok.

He didn’t think climate change or air pollution played into the timing or formation of these weekend storms, either.

Other experts agreed.

“I believe the issue with rain on holiday weekends is simply luck of the draw,” Steve Decker, an associate professor at Rutgers University said. “Climate change can make rain events heavier when they happen, but that doesn’t affect the timing of the rain.”

Past studies had connected vehicle emission pollution to precipitation levels on week days and weekends, he noted, but the air has gotten cleaner since then.

That said, 44 percent of Americans are living in places with unhealthy levels of ozone or particle pollution, according to the American Lung Association latest “State of the Air” report.

It dumped on much of the U.S. this Memorial Day weekend and many places have seen weekend trips foiled by recent rainstorms. Experts say the answer for what’s driving these storms is multi-pronged
It dumped on much of the U.S. this Memorial Day weekend and many places have seen weekend trips foiled by recent rainstorms. Experts say the answer for what’s driving these storms is multi-pronged (Getty Images)

And, air pollution can influence the behavior of precipitation, including how much rain falls, John Nielsen-Gammon, the Texas State Climatologist, said.

But, “any weekend effect ought to be minor,” he told The Independent.

There’s also “no connection” between recent rainy weekends and the impending shift to an El Niño climate pattern, James Booth, a professor at The City College of New York, said.

El Niño patterns, which are natural parts of the climate, typically bring wetter and colder weather to the southern U.S..

This year’s El Niño is projected to be incredibly strong, although climate change can hamstring predictions and analysis based on past years.

While there’s a consensus among these experts that air pollution and climate change aren’t influencing the timing of weekend storms, that doesn’t mean they’re not factors in the storms at all.

Scientists know that polluting greenhouse gases from fossil fuels – like carbon dioxide and methane – are responsible for warming the Earth’s atmosphere.

A warmer atmosphere can hold more moisture. That leads to an increased chance of storms and heavy rain
A warmer atmosphere can hold more moisture. That leads to an increased chance of storms and heavy rain (Getty Images)

A warmer atmosphere can hold more moisture. That means an increased storm formation and heavier rainfall.

“Climate change is certainly increasing the upper limit on moisture in storms but that influence is most clear in intense storms and in increasing variability,” Matthew Barlow, a professor of climate science, at the University of Massachusetts Lowell, told The Independent.

Where these storms dump may vary, says Nielsen-Gammon. But there’s another factor that can make them especially dangerous.

They may be more likely to stay in one place for a while.

“Add to that changes in the jet stream tend to slow storms down which means they can dump more rain in one place,” noted Tom Rickenbach, a professor of atmospheric science at East Carolina University.

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