# Are India's big cities getting hotter?

> Mumbai, Chennai, and Bengaluru have warmer annual averages than in 1940. Chennai's hot nights are the clearest alarm.

**India's city heat story is mixed. Nights are the warning.**

The clean answer is: some cities are clearly warmer, but city heat does not move in one neat line. In Open-Meteo ERA5 data from 1940 to 2025, Mumbai's annual mean rose from 26.18°C to 27.16°C, Chennai's from 27.71°C to 28.54°C, and Bengaluru's from 21.97°C to 23.33°C. Delhi's point series is lower in 2025 than in 1940, so this page should not claim every city warmed by this measure. The stronger lived signal is night heat. Chennai went from 22 hot nights in 1940 to 99 in 2025. Mumbai went from 2 to 14. Hot nights matter because the body gets less time to recover.

The tempting answer is a simple yes. Climate change is real, India is warming, and cities trap heat. But a good data page has to respect what its own charts can prove.

For Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, and Bengaluru, the Open-Meteo ERA5 point series gives a more careful answer. Mumbai, Chennai, and Bengaluru are warmer on annual average than they were in 1940. Delhi is not, at least in this city-coordinate reanalysis series. Very hot days also do not rise cleanly across all four cities. The most human signal is different: hot nights. Chennai and Mumbai now have many more nights where the temperature does not fall below 28°C.

That is the story worth telling. City heat is not only about the afternoon peak. It is also about whether the night gives people a break.

## What do annual averages say about city heat?

Annual average temperature is the cleanest first chart because it uses every day of the year. It is not one heatwave, one monsoon week, or one bad May afternoon. It asks a plain question: if you average the year, has the city become warmer?

For three cities, the answer is yes. Mumbai rose from 26.18°C in 1940 to 27.16°C in 2025. Chennai rose from 27.71°C to 28.54°C. Bengaluru rose from 21.97°C to 23.33°C. Bengaluru has the largest first-to-latest increase in this set, about 1.36°C.

Delhi is the warning against lazy storytelling. Its series goes from 25.61°C in 1940 to 24.8°C in 2025. That does not mean Delhi is safe from heat. It means this specific city-coordinate annual average is not a straight warming line from the first point to the last. A proper article should say that clearly.

So the annual-average chart gives a qualified answer: most of these city points warmed, but not all of them by this measure.

## Are very hot days becoming more common?

The second chart counts very hot days, defined here as days with maximum temperature at or above 35°C. This is closer to what people feel in the afternoon, especially workers outside, children travelling to school, and anyone without cooling.

The long-run first-to-latest comparison is again mixed, and in this case mostly lower. Delhi had 144 very hot days in 1940 and 87 in 2025. Mumbai went from 3 to 2. Chennai went from 28 to 21. Bengaluru went from 5 to 0.

That looks surprising. It does not cancel climate change, and it does not prove these cities have become comfortable. It says the fixed 35°C threshold, at these exact coordinates, is not the strongest way to summarize the heat burden across all four cities. A single threshold can fit Delhi differently from Mumbai, Chennai, or Bengaluru. Coastal humidity can make a lower maximum feel brutal. Bengaluru may rarely cross 35°C and still become warmer than its old self.

This chart is useful because it blocks overclaiming. It tells us not to reduce urban heat to one national slogan or one afternoon threshold.

## Why do hot nights matter so much?

The third chart is the strongest public-health signal in this article. It counts hot nights, defined here as nights where the minimum temperature stays at or above 28°C. A hot day is hard. A hot night is different because the body gets less time to cool down.

Chennai is the clearest case. It had 22 hot nights in 1940 and 99 in 2025. In 2024, the same series reached 113. That is not a small seasonal inconvenience. It is a large part of the year where night offers little relief. Mumbai also moved up, from 2 hot nights in 1940 to 14 in 2025, with a recent high of 39 in 2023.

Delhi does not show the same first-to-latest pattern here: 49 hot nights in 1940 and 37 in 2025. Bengaluru has zero in both years because 28°C nights are rare at that elevation. That is exactly why city-specific thresholds matter.

The answer is not that every city is hotter in the same way. The answer is that heat is changing differently by place, and hot nights are the danger signal to watch in coastal cities.

## What should a reader take away?

The city heat story should be honest and useful. Mumbai, Chennai, and Bengaluru are warmer by annual average than in 1940. Delhi's annual-average series does not follow that simple pattern. Very hot days above 35°C are not rising cleanly in this four-city set. Hot nights, especially in Chennai and Mumbai, carry the most worrying signal.

This also tells us what this page should build next. Four city points are a start, not the full map. Kolkata is excluded here because its local Open-Meteo artifact failed the full-history fetch and only had ten January 2025 daily rows, which would make a false annual chart. The next version should add more cities, station cross-checks where available, humidity or wet-bulb heat, and neighbourhood-level exposure.

For now, the clean answer is this: India's big-city heat is not one story. It is an annual warming story in some cities, a night-heat story in coastal cities, and a measurement story everywhere. The reader should leave with more caution, not less concern.

## Sources

- Open-Meteo historical weather API, ERA5 daily data, aggregated locally into annual city-coordinate series.
- The annual series now keeps only complete calendar years. Partial 2026 values were removed from the annual charts.
- Kolkata is excluded from this article because the local full-history Open-Meteo fetch failed twice and the previous artifact had only ten January 2025 daily rows.

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Source: [This Indian Life](https://thisindianlife.today/articles/are-indias-big-cities-getting-hotter/) · Updated 2026-06-02. Licensed CC BY 4.0. Please cite as "This Indian Life — https://thisindianlife.today".
