Switzerland is in the grip of an exceptional early-summer heatwave that meteorologists are describing as without precedent in almost 150 years of recorded weather, with temperatures expected to remain above 30°C across the Swiss lowlands through the coming days.
Temperatures topped 30°C across multiple Swiss locations this week, with MeteoSwiss recording 32°C in Geneva, 33°C in Sion and Basel, and 31°C in Bern. The heat is driven by a stable high-pressure block that forecasters say could persist until early June, with MeteoSwiss describing it as a “positive high pressure anomaly” becoming more frequent and intense due to climate change.
Weather commentators called the situation “simply unprecedented since weather records began almost 150 years ago”.
For the week ahead, Zürich faces highs of around 31–32°C through to the last day of May 2026, before a brief cooling at the weekend brings temperatures back toward the mid-to-upper 20s. A renewed surge of heat is considered likely early next week.

Swiss Heatwave Comes With High Pollen Load
The heatwave is compounding several other environmental stresses simultaneously. Air quality monitoring firm IQAir reports particulate matter concentrations in Switzerland are currently running at 1.9 times the annual WHO limit. In France, authorities have warned that ozone levels are expected to breach the EU information threshold of 180 micrograms per cubic metre across the Île-de-France and the Rhône Valley, putting elderly people, pregnant women, and young children at elevated risk of respiratory and cardiac complications.
MeteoSwiss is also warning of an exceptionally high pollen load, with grass, sorrel, plantain and lime tree pollen all simultaneously in the air, making this one of the most difficult periods of the year for allergy sufferers. The dry heat is accelerating grass flowering and maximising airborne pollen dispersal.
Those with respiratory conditions, grass pollen allergies, or cardiovascular disease should monitor air quality alerts closely and reduce time outdoors on days when both ozone and pollen levels peak. The current forecast suggests the first meaningful relief will not arrive until Sunday, this weekend, at the earliest.
Read More: Why Swiss Rents are Rising Faster Again: Raiffeisen Q2 2026 Report – Helvetica Times
The France Comparison
The situation across the border is even more extreme compared to the Swiss Heatwave. France’s weather service declared Monday the warmest May day since records began. Eight western departments, including parts of Brittany, are under orange heat alert for Tuesday, with temperatures between 33°C and 36°C expected, an unheard-of figure for the Atlantic coast in May.
Pope Leo XIV Warns AI Is “Threat to Human Dignity” in New Landmark Encyclical