Skip to content

Heat wave to grip Winchester through holiday weekend

Forecast highs for Winchester climb into the mid-90s through the holiday weekend, with six straight days flagged at the red heat threshold before easing to elevated yellow on Monday, July 6. Source: Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency.

Table of Contents

Step outside in Winchester on Wednesday morning and it may already feel like midafternoon in midsummer. Forecasters warn that several days of dangerous heat — paired with overnight temperatures that barely dip — could leave residents little chance to cool off.

The National Weather Service has issued an extreme heat warning for Middlesex County, in effect from 10 a.m. Wednesday through 8 p.m. Saturday. Afternoon heat index values could reach 98 to 112 degrees. The worst of it lands Thursday and Friday, when air temperatures alone may hit roughly 103 degrees in Winchester before humidity is factored in.

Seven-day heat forecast
Heat advisory

Seven days of dangerous heat

Forecast highs for Marblehead, June 30 – July 6


Red — extreme heat Yellow — elevated

Source: Community seven-day forecast. Scale 0–100°F.

The forecast reads like a steady climb: a high near 91 Tuesday, then about 99 Wednesday, 103 Thursday, 101 Friday and 94 on Independence Day. Nights offer little relief. Lows are expected to hold between 70 and 80 degrees. Showers and thunderstorms could return Friday and Saturday, in the afternoon or evening.

That mix of heat and humidity sharply raises the odds of heat-related illness, forecasters said, with the greatest danger to older adults, young children, people with chronic medical conditions, outdoor workers and anyone without air conditioning. The advice is blunt: drink plenty of fluids, stay somewhere cool, keep out of direct sun and look in on relatives and neighbors.

State health officials echo the warning. The Massachusetts Department of Public Health notes that three or more straight days at 85 degrees or above tend to drive a sharp rise in heat-related emergency room visits statewide. Officials urge residents to ease off outdoor activity at midday, dress in lightweight clothing and never leave children or pets alone in a parked car.

Anyone planning Fourth of July festivities should plan around the heat, even as temperatures slip from their midweek peak. Dangerous conditions may hang on into Saturday, the weather service said, before a cold front finally ushers in some relief.

Will Dowd is a Massachusetts journalist who covers municipal government and community life for Winchester News. He is also the founder and editor of The Marblehead Independent, a reader-funded digital newsroom.

Winchester News is a non-profit organization supported by our community. If you appreciate having local Winchester news, please donate to support our work, and subscribe to our free weekly newsletter. Copyright 2026 Winchester News Group, Inc. Copying and sharing with written permission only.

Latest

The first-ever Bike Rodeo held at Winchester Town Day

The first-ever Bike Rodeo held at Winchester Town Day

The following was submitted by Walk & Roll Winchester: More than 30 Winchester children participated in the first-ever Bike Rodeo held during Winchester Town Day on Saturday, June 6, at Winchester High School. Organized by volunteers from Walk & Roll Winchester and the Climate Action Advisory Committee, in partnership

Rep. Michael Day, Mass. House pass Environmental Bond Bill

Rep. Michael Day, Mass. House pass Environmental Bond Bill

The following was submitted by the Office of Rep. Michael S. Day: The Massachusetts House of Representative recently passed the Environmental Bond Bill, a $3.5 billion measure that will modernize environmental laws, strengthen climate resilience, support agricultural and food systems, streamline permitting processes and improve the management of the

  Subscribe