bridge flooded during the
2021 Eastern Australian floods Rainfall is slightly higher or dominant during the first half of the year, particularly in late summer and early autumn, when the ocean has peaked its warmth. Rainfall will tend to be lower in the second half of the year when the subtropical ridge is just to the north of the city. Most rain comes mostly from major storms, rarely
drizzle, particularly from subtropical lows that bring warm, moist air onshore. Within the city and surrounds, rainfall varies, from around at
Badgerys Creek (in the west) to at
Turramurra (the northeast) in the
Northern Suburbs, which create an
orographic rainfall. The annual
evaporation rate for Sydney is , with the rate in the summer being and in winter .
Storms , April 2015 , December 2017
East coast lows, which strike from the southeast in the
Tasman Sea, bring heavy rainfall typically in autumn to early winter. The precipitation of the low comes from a
nimbostratus cloud that dumps as much as of rain for as much as two days. Sydney generally experiences between 20 and 25 thunder days a year on average. Thunderstorms arrive from the west, and normally involve northeasterly winds at the surface. The western suburbs are more inclined to receive thunderstorms in summer due to the stabilizing effect of a
sea breeze in the afternoon near the CBD and Eastern Suburbs. Isolated convective showers form when a
cold pool arrives from the southwest, particularly on hot and sultry days. These showers usually come in heavy downpours and can include hail, squalls, and drops in temperature, but they generally pass very quickly.
Black nor'easters may bring persistent rainfall for a few consecutive days in the warm months, and
Australian northwest cloudbands produce light rainfall in the cool months. The city is prone to severe
hailstorms, windstorms, and
flash flooding. Scientists have predicted that rainfall will become more unpredictable and temperatures will be on the rise. In 2011, Sydney recorded its wettest July since 1950, where the CBD recorded of rain that month. The year 2011 was also the wettest year since records began in 1858. Parts of western Sydney were substantially flooded during the
New South Wales 2021 floods, with many areas around
Richmond and
Windsor submerged in floodwaters. In
early 2022, Sydney recorded its wettest start to a year on record with the running annual total being , topping to the same date in 1956 and in 1990, respectively (rainfall data at Sydney Observatory Hill dates back to 1858).
Snowfall Snow is extremely rare in Sydney, with significant snowfall being last reported in the Sydney area on 28 June 1836. On that date, it was reported that
convicts and British settlers in
Hyde Park woke up to snow "nearly deep", with the meteorological table in
The Sydney Herald recording that on the morning of the snow the temperature dropped to . The snow event affected trading where sellers were unable to transport goods to markets in the colony. The snowfall occurred at the end of the
dalton minimum, a
solar cycle period representing low
solar activity, where colder temperatures were recorded globally. A keeper of weather observations during that period, T. A. Browne noted:
The Sydney Morning Herald reported on the event, saying:
The Sydney Monitor reported: Scant snowfall has been recorded in latter dates: • On 22 June 1951, light
snowflakes (which melted into rain) were reported in the suburbs of Liverpool,
Pymble and
Kingsgrove. • On 25 July 1986,
melting snow was observed in Sydney CBD,
Sydney Airport and
Bankstown, which did not settle on the ground. • On 27 July 2008, a fall of
graupel or soft hail (which was mistaken for snow by residents), blanketed
Lindfield,
Roseville and
Killara in white. Owing to this event, a senior forecaster from the Bureau of Meteorology doubted the 1836 snow account, stating that weather observers in that time period lacked the technology and skill to distinguish snow from soft hail. ==Drought==