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These are the 10 hottest summers in Phoenix history

It's always been hot here, sure. But it's never been this hot.
Image: The desert at sunset.
Nine of the 10 hottest Phoenix summers have occurred since the year 2000, according to data from the National Weather Service. Alexander Nie/Flickr/CC BY-SA 2.0
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"Summer has always been hot in Phoenix."

That's a common refrain from climate change deniers, and in the most basic sense, they are not wrong. Summer has always been hot in Phoenix.

But it's never been this hot.

Hundred-degree temperatures have already become routine this year in the Valley, meaning summer is here in full force. The good news is forecasters think the summer of 2025 won't be as hot as the past two, each of which broke records. But that doesn't mean it's not going to be hot as hell.

The scorching seasons are a recent phenomenon. According to data from the National Weather Service going back 100 years, nine of Phoenix's 10 hottest summers have all come this century.

In 1924, the average temperature across June, July and August was 89.1 degrees Fahrenheit. Last year, the average temperature over the same span was nearly 99 degrees. For that, we can thank climate change and the urban heat island effect, which have combined to make Phoenix the hottest city in America.

click to enlarge A graph showing the average summer temperature in Phoenix, which has steadily risen over the last 100 years.
The average temperature across June, July and August in Phoenix has steadily risen over the past 100 years, according to data from the National Weather Service.
Illustration by Zach Buchanan

Here, in ascending order, are the 10 hottest summers in Phoenix history.

Hottest summers in Phoenix

10. 2011: 94.81 degrees

June was a breeze in 2011, averaging only 90.8 degrees. July averaged 95.5 degrees — hot, but not extremely so for Phoenix. It was August that was the killer. The average August temperature was 98.3 degrees, the fourth-highest August in Phoenix ever. You'll see the three hotter ones later on in this list.

9. 1981: 94.82 degrees

Ah, the Eighties! A time of weird music and weirder clothes. Unfortunately, the temperature didn't stay in the 80s this particular year, a true outlier for the decade. The next-hottest '80s summer came in 1989, with an average of 94.4 degrees.

8. 2002: 94.85 degrees

Fun fact: The summer of 2002 doesn't rank in the top 10 for any individual month. But it was so consistently hot that year, it lands here as the seventh-hottest of all time.

7. 2019: 94.91 degrees

This summer was another late bloomer — late swelterer? — starting off cool and ramping up to an average of 96.8 degrees in August, the fifth-hottest August in the last 100 years.

6. 2007: 94.92 degrees

Another year with a blistering August, which averaged 96.2 degrees, the seventh-highest for that month. But 2007 leaps ahead of 2019 thanks to a slightly hotter (but still relatively mild) June that averaged 92.7 degrees.

5. 2013: 95.07 degrees

Some years lull you into a false sense of security. Others, like 2013, kick you in the mouth immediately. Averaging 94.8 degrees, June 2013 was the fourth-hottest June on record.

4. 2015: 95.11 degrees

This particular summer had a hot June, a hot August and a run-of-the-mill July, which averaged only 94.7, ranking 34th for that month.

3. 2020: 96.72 degrees

Well, if we were going to be locked inside for one summer, it might as well have been 2020. That July was the third-hottest on record, with an average of 98.9 degrees. August was the hottest August ever at 99.1 degrees.

And then the world got better, right? Right?

2. 2023: 97.08 degrees

Wrong! Now the hottest summer on record, 2023 really messed with our brains. June actually averaged lower than 90 degrees! But then July averaged 102.7 degrees — the first summer month to ever reach triple digits — and August was only slightly cooler at 98.8 degrees, still the second-hottest August we've ever seen.


1. 2024: 98.95 degrees

Coming for the number-one spot is last summer, which didn't quite match 2023 in July and August but blew its predecessor out of the water in June, which averaged 97 degrees. That made it the hottest June in history by nearly two degrees.