Worst time to visit Seward
Some months in Seward are clearly tougher for travel — extreme heat, cold, drenching rain, or peak storm season. Here's what to skip.
Months to avoid
| Month | Why |
|---|---|
| January | freezing (-6°C overnight)extremely wet (21 rain days) |
| February | freezing (-6°C overnight)extremely wet (19 rain days) |
| March | freezing (-4°C overnight)very wet (17 rain days) |
| April | freezing (0°C overnight)extremely wet (20 rain days) |
| May | extremely wet (21 rain days) |
| June | extremely wet (21 rain days) |
| July | extremely wet (23 rain days) |
| August | extremely wet (22 rain days)peak hurricane season |
| September | extremely wet (22 rain days)peak hurricane season |
| October | extremely wet (21 rain days)peak hurricane season |
| November | freezing (-4°C overnight)extremely wet (22 rain days) |
| December | freezing (-6°C overnight)extremely wet (23 rain days) |
What to expect in the worst months
August. 22 rain days out of 31 means roughly 71% of days see measurable rainfall — plan flexible indoor backups for every outdoor day. This is peak hurricane season — disruptive weather can shut down flights, boats, and outdoor activities at short notice.
September. 22 rain days out of 30 means roughly 73% of days see measurable rainfall — plan flexible indoor backups for every outdoor day. This is peak hurricane season — disruptive weather can shut down flights, boats, and outdoor activities at short notice.
October. 21 rain days out of 31 means roughly 68% of days see measurable rainfall — plan flexible indoor backups for every outdoor day. This is peak hurricane season — disruptive weather can shut down flights, boats, and outdoor activities at short notice.
Better times to go
No month in Seward hits the typical 18–28 °C / low-rain comfort zone — every season has trade-offs. Choose what you can tolerate: heat, cold, rain, or storm risk.
Better in the same region in August
If you're set on North America in August, these cities have more comfortable conditions in the same window:
If you still have to go — what to bring
- Cold: Merino base layer, insulated mid-layer, waterproof shell, grippy boots, hand warmers. Daylight is short — start mornings later, finish before sunset.
- Wet: Real rain shell (not a "water-resistant" jacket), packable umbrella, dry-bag for electronics, quick-dry layers. Pre-book indoor museums and food halls.
- Storm season: Buy travel insurance with weather-disruption coverage, build 24–48 h flexibility into your itinerary, and follow the local meteorological agency on social.
Related Seward guides
The positive counterpart: which months are great and why.