Shaqra: a year of weather
This page gathers the live picture for Shaqra now, an hour-by-hour outlook and a seven-day forecast, with a grounded guide to the local seasons.
Rainfall is low — near 130 mm a year — and the daily range is wide: from July highs around 41 °C to winter dawns near 4 °C. The classification is hot desert, Köppen BWh.
On the high western plateau the land is open gravel rangeland and rocky rises, well over a thousand metres in places, exposed to the wind and quick to chill after dark.
The result is a clear annual rhythm: a furnace-like summer, a short mild winter that is the heart of the year, and brief, dust-prone shoulder seasons.
With cloudless skies on most days, ultraviolet levels run high for much of the year; a hat, sunglasses and sunscreen are worth carrying even on a mild winter afternoon, and the glare off the pale ground only adds to it.
The roads out to Shaqra run through open desert, exposed to blowing dust and, after rain, to water running across the wadi crossings — so it is worth checking the forecast before a long drive on these empty stretches.
In summer
Summer is long, dry and severe. Afternoons climb to about 41 °C under a hard sun, with very dry air; nights fall back toward 25 °C. Work and travel are best kept to the early morning and the cool of the evening.
The cool season
The cool months are the kindest time of year. Days run near 20 °C, but the clear desert sky lets the temperature fall to around 4 °C after dark, with frost likely on the stillest nights. It’s comfortably the best stretch of the year for being outdoors.
Between the seasons
Spring is the restless one of the two shoulders. Spring brings spring, when the high plateau is dustiest and the year’s most active rain, greening the desert for a few weeks; autumn is the calmer, settled side of the year.
Rain & storms
Measurable rain comes only a handful of times a year, mostly in spring. Because the ground is hard and dry, even a short storm can turn a dry watercourse into a running stream, so take care near low ground when it rains.
The hourly and daily panels above show the live chance of rain for the week.
For most of the year, rain is simply not part of the picture.
Wind and dust
The air stays dry through most of the year, which takes some of the sting out of the heat but raises the risk of dehydration. Wind is what changes a day here — a spring northerly can fill the sky with dust off the surrounding desert in a matter of hours.
Use the wind and air-quality readings above to judge a dusty day before you set out.
Away from the spring storms, the skies here are among the cleanest and clearest anywhere.
Making the most of it
For travel and the outdoors, treat summer as a heat-management exercise — light clothing, sun cover, plenty of water, and movement kept to the cool ends of the day — and pack something genuinely warm for the cold desert nights of winter, which can approach freezing.
The open country rewards an early start: beat the heat in summer, and in the cool months you’ll have clear, mild days perfect for the outdoors.
Make the live panel your first stop. It shows the current conditions, the hour-by-hour trend and the full week ahead, which between them cover almost everything you need to plan a day around the weather.
Aim for the November-to-March window for comfort — and either way, the conditions above refresh automatically so the forecast is always current before you go.