Latest Rainfall Radar showing live precipitation and the last 90 minutes precipitation over Ireland, updated every 5 minutes. Precipitation can be rain, hail or snow. Accumulations can refer to rainfall only.
Lightning strikes, when they occur, are displayed as a cross. Initially, they are red but change to orange and then yellow after a period, then disappear © Met Office ATDNet.
Ground Clutter may appear (South Co. Dublin), bright bands and spokes may also be present in images. They are artefacts (false echoes) of rainfall radar systems and should be ignored. Further information on Radar here
Met Éireann forecasters manually produce the weather icons for midday and midnight to reflect the predicted major weather type for these times.
The rainfall forecast is direct model output from Numerical Weather Prediction models but is a guideline only. Rain refers to precipitation, which can be rain, sleet or snow. It forecasts how much rain will fall (in mm) hourly during the previous hour (accumulations), then in 3 hourly and finally 6 hourly accumulations up to 7 days. This service is based on data and products of the HARMONIE-AROME and the European Centre for Medium-range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) models.
The wind is direct model output from Numerical Weather Prediction models but is a guideline only. It forecasts the strength of the wind (in knots and km/h) at 10m for the top of each hour, in hourly, then 3 hourly and finally 6 hourly intervals up to 7 days. The wind arrow tip points in the direction the wind is blowing and the tail length indicates wind strength. However, in the text forecast below, it is described as where it is blowing from. This service is based on data and products of the HARMONIE-AROME and the European Centre for Medium-range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) models.
The temperature is direct model output from Numerical Weather Prediction models but is a guideline only. It forecasts air temperature on land and over sea in °C for the top of each hour, 3 hourly and finally 6 hourly intervals up to 7 days. Minus zero (-0) indicates values between 0 to -0.5°C. This service is based on data and products of the HARMONIE-AROME and the European Centre for Medium-range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) models.
The Mean Sea Level Pressure (MSLP) is direct model output from Numerical Weather Prediction models but is a guideline only. It forecasts the MSLP in hecto Pascals (hPa) for the top of that hour initially in 3 hourly intervals, then 6 hourly. This service is based on data and products of the HARMONIE-AROME and the European Centre for Medium-range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) models.
Réamhaisnéis Náisiúnta
10 January 2026 06:36
Inniu
Cold in most areas this morning with frost, ice and fog or freezing fog in parts of the north midlands and east slowly clearing. Dry with some sunny spells for most for a time, but there'll still be scattered showers this morning, mainly in Ulster and parts of the west, a few heavy and wintry in the north. Cloud will build from the west with scattered outbreaks of rain and drizzle spreading from the west through the afternoon and evening. It'll stay dry for many eastern parts for daylight hours. Highest temperatures of 4 to 9 degrees, coldest in the northeast, with the higher temperatures in the southwest. Winds will be light southwesterly or variable, becoming south to southeast later and freshening a little further west.
Anocht
Cloudy tonight with outbreaks of rain and drizzle along with some hill and coastal mist and fog. It'll become rather windy with southerly winds increasing fresh to strong and occasionally gusty. Lowest temperatures of 2 to 5 degrees in the north and east initially, but between 6 and 9 degrees elsewhere, with those less cold conditions extending to all areas overnight.
Amárach
Sunday will be a cloudy day with outbreaks of rain and drizzle at times, along with some hill and coastal mist and fog. Some drier spells will develop in parts, especially during the morning, before more rain moves up from the south through the afternoon. A clearance will start to extend from the southwest and west in the evening. Southerly winds will decrease moderate to fresh in the morning, before it becomes windy again through the afternoon and evening, with south to southwest winds increasing strong and gusty and reaching near gale to gale force in Atlantic coastal areas. Much milder than recently with highest temperatures of 9 to 12 degrees.
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