Malta’s weather and climate are strongly influenced by the sea and have a typical Mediterranean flavour, similar to that found in southern Italy.
The climate is typically Mediterranean, summers are hot and dry, autumns warm and wet, and short cool winters with minimum rainfall.
Temperatures are stable, with a mean of 18ºC and monthly averages ranging from 12º C to 31ºC . Winds are strong and frequent; the most common are the cool northwesterly, the dry northeasterly, and the hot humid southeasterly. Winters are mild with only rare occurrences of cold weather brought by north and northeast winds from central Europe. In fact, daytime winter temperatures almost never fall below 10ºC , while night-time winter temperatures never fall below 0ºC (32ºF). Sometimes it gets rather windy for up to 3 days with strong gale force winds blowing either from the northwest (Malta’s most common wind) or from the northeast bringing days of miserable stormy weather. Most of Malta’s rainfall falls during autumn and winter, mostly from thunderstorms which make up most of the rainfall from September to December. It is usually mild in Malta during the winter, with plenty of sunshine, too, with daytime temperatures usually 15ºC or above and sometimes also around 20ºC .
Summers are warm, dry and very sunny. The weather usually shows signs of warming up in April, heralding in a long spell of hot, dry weather. It rarely rains from April to August. July and August are Malta’s hottest months with daytime temperatures usually above 30ºC and quite often also above 35ºC . Humidity is rather high in Malta (due to the fact that Malta is an island) summer temperatures can feel quite irritating, thereby making it quite often unbearable to stay out in the sun. This is especially so in August and September, when a high humidity can make it quite unbearable at night. However, daytime temperatures in summer are usually mitigated by cooling sea breezes, especially along the coast, but in spring and autumn a very hot and dry wind from Africa occasionally brings unpleasantly high temperatures. This wind is called the sirocco, which also affects Italy and Greece, but in Malta it is usually rather drier because of the short sea track from the African coast.


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