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🌎 Global Climate Data

Is Madrid Getting Hotter?

178 years of temperature data from the GHCN global network (1840-2026) +1.7C since 1900

Madrid has warmed 1.7 degrees since the 1900s, placing it in the middle tier of global cities for warming. The record spans 178 years and the trend is clear.

What stands out is the pace of change. Most of the warming has been concentrated in the last few decades, with the rate accelerating from the 1980s onward.

Total warming
+1.7C
Since 1900s (annual average)
Hottest decade
2010s
Avg: 15.7C
Warming rate
0.2C
Per decade
vs global average
1.4x
Warming faster than global mean

Average Annual Temperature by Decade

Madrid (station: Madridretiro), GHCN v4 homogenised data. Values are decade averages of annual mean temperature.
Long-term trend: +0.2C per decade

Madrid's warming is close to the average across the 29 major cities in our global dataset.

Decade by Decade

Decade Avg Temp (C) Change from 1900s

How Madrid Compares Globally

Among the world's major cities, Madrid's warming rate places it in the upper tier. Here is how Madrid stacks up against other global cities.

London
UK
+1.6C
Since 1900s
Similar warming
Paris
France
+1.5C
Since 1900s
Similar warming
Stockholm
Sweden
+2C
Since 1900s
Warming 0.3C more
Sao Paulo
Brazil
+3.1C
Since 1900s
Warming 1.4C more
Tokyo
Japan
+2.2C
Since 1900s
Warming 0.5C more
Toronto
Canada
+2.2C
Since 1900s
Warming 0.5C more

Key Numbers

Total warming
+1.7C
Since 1900s
Warmest decade
2010s
Avg: 15.7C
Coolest decade
1910s
Avg: 13.8C
Records span
178 yrs
1840-2026 (GHCN v4)

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About This Data

Temperature data on this page comes from the Global Historical Climatology Network version 4 (GHCN v4), maintained by NOAA's National Centers for Environmental Information. GHCN v4 contains monthly mean temperature data for over 25,000 stations across the globe, with records dating back to the 18th century for some stations. The data has been quality-controlled and homogenised using the Pairwise Homogeneity Algorithm to remove artificial discontinuities from station moves, equipment changes, and observation practice changes.

Madrid's primary station is Madridretiro, with records spanning 1840-2026. The "change" figures compare each decade's average to the 1900s baseline. Note that some of the warming in large cities is attributable to the urban heat island effect rather than regional climate change alone. The figures shown here include both components, as they represent what the city actually experiences.

NASA GISTEMP analysis, which processes GHCN v4 data, is a product of NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies. It is produced as a US Government work and is in the public domain.