Weekend plans in Bengaluru may need a rethink as day temperatures are forecast to climb sharply, with models indicating a peak around Sunday and persisting heat through mid‑week. Forecasters expect a largely dry spell, which limits cooling from thunderstorms and allows daytime heating to build. Health risks and power demand are both projected to rise as the city moves deeper into a pre‑monsoon hot phase.
The latest outlook for Bengaluru between April 10 and April 15 signals a steady temperature rise, rather than isolated hot days. Meteorological guidance points to stronger solar heating, weak moisture inflow and only patchy convective clouds. These ingredients together support a gradual, sustained warming trend, especially over the city’s interiors, where concrete surfaces trap heat and slow nocturnal cooling.

Heat to peak around Sunday and early next week
Forecast charts suggest maximum temperatures will edge up from near‑normal levels to clearly above the seasonal mark by the weekend. Sunday is expected to see highs near 36°C, with many neighbourhoods feeling even warmer due to low wind speeds during the afternoon. Early next week, including around Wednesday, the city could approach 38°C, a level that significantly increases heat stress for outdoor workers.
Climatologically, Bengaluru’s average April maximum tends to hover near the low thirties, and even one or two degrees above normal can feel intense under clear skies. When the anomaly reaches three to four degrees, the impact becomes more noticeable in daily life: fans and coolers run longer, evening outdoor activity declines and vulnerable groups struggle more. This upcoming spell falls in that higher‑impact bracket, even without officially breaching heatwave criteria.
Day‑by‑day forecast: April 9 to April 15
Numerical model output points to a smooth warming curve rather than abrupt spikes, which makes planning easier but also means persistent discomfort. Night temperatures are likely to stay elevated as well, offering limited relief after hot afternoons. Only isolated, short‑lived thundershowers are indicated on some days, too scattered to bring a city‑wide drop in temperature or humidity.
| Date | Forecast High (°C) | Rain Signal |
|---|---|---|
| April 9 | 33 | Very low |
| April 10 | 34 | Very low |
| April 11 | 35 | Isolated |
| April 12 | 35–36 | Isolated |
| April 13 (Sunday) | 36 | Minimal |
| April 14 | 36–37 | Minimal |
| April 15 (Wednesday) | 37–38 | Minimal |
Why Bengaluru is heating faster this week
Meteorologists link the impending spike to a typical pre‑monsoon pattern: strong April sun, weakening easterlies and only weak disturbances over south interior Karnataka. Without a well‑organised thunderstorm belt, daily cloud growth is delayed, so temperatures climb earlier and higher. Urban heat island effects add another degree or more in dense localities with heavy traffic, sparse trees and extensive paved surfaces.
This week’s pattern also reflects a broader background of warmer‑than‑average conditions over peninsular India. Sea surface temperatures around the region are currently elevated, nudging seasonal baselines higher. When a warm background meets a dry, sunny window, cities like Bengaluru feel sharper heat, even though they sit at higher elevations. The coming days illustrate how quickly conditions can flip from comfortable to taxing at this time of year.
Heat‑health risks and practical precautions
Health experts warn that sustained highs in the mid to upper thirties can trigger dehydration, heat exhaustion and, in extreme cases, heatstroke, especially among the elderly, children and people with chronic illness. They advise drinking water regularly, avoiding outdoor exertion in the early afternoon, using light clothing and checking on vulnerable neighbours. Employers are also encouraged to stagger outdoor work shifts away from peak heat hours where possible.
For Bengaluru’s residents, the key message is preparation rather than panic. The city is not facing record‑breaking temperatures, but the combination of rising daytime highs, warm nights and minimal rain will test comfort levels, grid stability and healthcare systems. Adjusting weekend and early‑week plans, staying informed through official forecasts and adopting simple heat‑smart habits can together ease the impact of this upcoming hot spell.
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