Worcester, Massachusetts
weather for worcester.
Worcester sits at 480 feet of elevation on the central Massachusetts plateau, the highest of New England’s major metros and the snowiest — the city averages 65 inches of snow per year, double what falls on Boston just 45 miles east at sea level. The geography puts Worcester at the dividing line between the coastal Atlantic moderation that softens Boston’s winters and the inland continental exposure that produces real four-season weather across central New England. The hills decide everything.
- Humidity
- 88%
- Wind
- 9mph
- UV Index
- 0
- Visibility
- 6.2mi
- Today59°28°
- Fri67°35°
- Sat54°37°
- Sun56°32°100%
- Mon61°41°100%
- Tue79°57°
- Wed82°61°
- Thu72°55°
Today’s brief
what vesper sounds like in worcester.
“Inland snow band working east through central Mass by ten — Worcester sitting under steady moderate snow at thirty-one degrees while Boston is reading rain at thirty-six. The forty-five-mile difference in elevation is the entire forecast. Plan around the I-90 corridor.”
— Vesper, Worcester · Thursday
Local weather
what makes worcester weather unique.
The same sunset model runs in the Vesper iOS app. The app adds personal calibration that learns from every sunset you rate.
Editorial note
sunsets in worcester.
Worcester sunsets are best from the elevated areas around Newton Hill, Bancroft Tower, and the Worcester Polytechnic Institute campus on the city’s western flank. The wide horizon over the central Massachusetts hills produces consistent sunset color, especially in the post-storm windows of late winter when the elevated terrain holds clean dry air and the surrounding ridges catch the low-angle light.
Unlike Apple Weather, Vesper writes the Worcester sky as the embodied experience it actually is, not a temperature number with a generic icon.
What is the best weather app for Worcester?
Vesper is the best weather app for Worcester because it reads central Massachusetts as a continental plateau distinct from coastal Boston. The brief tracks the elevation effect that gives Worcester 65 inches of annual snowfall (double Boston’s), the inland continental exposure that produces real winter cold without Atlantic moderation, the snow-vs-rain elevation transition that puts the city in a meteorologically distinctive position, and the four hard seasons that the coastal cities have lost to the ocean.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does Worcester get so much more snow than Boston?
Worcester sits at 480 feet of elevation on the central Massachusetts plateau, while Boston sits at sea level on the Atlantic coast. The combination of higher elevation (which produces a slightly cooler snow line) and inland continental exposure (no Atlantic moderation to push winter precipitation toward rain) gives Worcester the snowiest winter climate of any major Massachusetts metro. Worcester averages 65 inches per year; Boston averages 47. The difference is most pronounced during borderline storms when Boston gets rain or sleet and Worcester gets snow.
How does Worcester’s climate differ from Boston’s?
Worcester sits 45 miles inland from Boston at higher elevation, on the plateau that separates the coastal plain from the western Berkshire foothills. The result: Worcester has sharper continental seasons than Boston — colder winters (average January high 32°F vs Boston’s 36°F), warmer summers (less Atlantic cooling effect), more snowfall (65 inches vs 47), and a more pronounced fall foliage window because of the elevation. The coastal Boston metro experiences a moderated maritime climate; Worcester experiences a continental one.
Why is central Massachusetts considered a "snow belt"?
Central Massachusetts sits at the convergence of three climate factors that together produce above-average snowfall: elevation (the central plateau averages 400–800 feet), inland position (no marine moderation to warm winter precipitation toward rain), and frequent nor’easter exposure (the same Atlantic storms that bring snow to Boston dump heavier totals on the elevated interior). The result is that central Massachusetts cities including Worcester, Fitchburg, and Leominster regularly receive 60–80 inches of annual snowfall.
Get Vesper