Winter is the fastest-warming season for most of the U.S. — affecting snowfall, water supplies, winter sports, spring allergies, summer fruits, and more. In our warming world, the coldest days aren’t as cold and cold snaps are shrinking.
From 1970 to 2025, winters have warmed in 98% of 244 U.S. cities analyzed — by 3.9°F on average. Most cities (88%) now experience at least seven more warmer-than-normal winter days than they did in the early 1970s. Locations across the Northeast and the Great Lakes region have seen some of the highest rates of winter warming:



Oh yeah. I have spent my whole life in a cold area. Went about 5 hours south for college which I started in 1990. This had a weird effect because it got me used to slightly milder winters which continued when I went back to my home city. So it took a bit into the aughts to think about it and realize how different the weather I experienced in the 80’s is from what I experienced in the aughts and its continued to get milder. We still can get the cold weather but the worst of it are not yearly events anymore. Then also when we do get something bad it reverses itself in a few days. So like yeah we can have a cold snap or lots of snow but both will be gone in again days. Rarely over a week. Growing up its like winter set in and then it was going to be cold with snow on the ground till at earliest late febuary but usually march and sometimes april. I mean it would be kinda awesome locally if not for the grave global implications.