Jump directly to the content

BRITAIN could be set for a white Easter as forecasters warn more snow is on the way.

Weather charts show a 270-mile 'snow bomb' is on course to hit parts of Britain next month - after an 18C warm spell.

⚡ Read our UK weather live blog for the very latest news and forecasts...

 

Brits could face a white Easter this year as forecasters predict snow could return
9
Brits could face a white Easter this year as forecasters predict snow could returnCredit: PA:Press Association
Eight-year-old Harrison Walker building sandcastles in the sun on Tynemouth beach near Newcastle
9
Eight-year-old Harrison Walker building sandcastles in the sun on Tynemouth beach near NewcastleCredit: North News and Pictures
Two swimmers go for a morning dip as the sun rises this morning in Whitby, North Yorkshire
9
Two swimmers go for a morning dip as the sun rises this morning in Whitby, North YorkshireCredit: London News Pictures

WX Charts predicts a band of snow - stretching from Norfolk to Dorset - could blanket some areas.

It would mean Birmingham, parts of the West Midlands and Wales, Gloucestershire, parts of Somerset, Bristol and Dorset, could see the white stuff from March 9.

And the wintry weather could continue into April, with the Met Office saying "a white Easter is more likely than a white Christmas".

Meteorologist Grahame Madge told : "It's possible that we could get snow in March.

"In fact, it's more likely we will get snow in March than in December."

He added: "I can see the weather system that is causing the excitement, but it’s too far away and too uncertain to have any indication yet.

"It is unlikely to see an easterly weather front coming across, but a white Easter is more likely than a white Christmas."

WX Charts shows a band of snow could stretch across parts of England in March
9
WX Charts shows a band of snow could stretch across parts of England in MarchCredit: WX CHARTS
Families could be playing in the snow over the Easter weekend
9
Families could be playing in the snow over the Easter weekendCredit: Scott Huntley/HVC
Neighbours in Frinton, Essex, built 13 snowmen when the cold snap hit earlier this month
9
Neighbours in Frinton, Essex, built 13 snowmen when the cold snap hit earlier this monthCredit: SWNS:South West News Service

It comes after Brits basked in sunshine on the hottest day of the year so far yesterday - just weeks after the country was battered with snow, wind and torrential rain.

Temperatures hit 18C on Wednesday, making parts of the UK hotter than Madrid.

Forecasters said it the weather showed "the first signs of spring", with some places experiencing weather more like May than February.

Met Office spokesman Oli Claydon said it was a "noticeable change from what we've had in recent weeks".

Today it is mostly dry with sunny spells across much of the UK, but with some "blustery showers" in the northwest.

Top temperatures so far are in Cardiff where it reached 13.3C at lunchtime, according to the Met Office.

It will be a dry night which could bring "widespread frost and isolated fog patches".

And more sunshine is predicted for the end of the working week, with sunshine and mild temperatures again reaching up to 15C across the UK.

Mr Claydon said: "It will feel more like spring, especially in the sunshine."

A couple play in the daffodils in St James's Park, London
9
A couple play in the daffodils in St James's Park, London
Two kayakers soak up the sun in Cambridge
9
Two kayakers soak up the sun in Cambridge
9

The unseasonably warm weather is the result of air being blown up from north Africa and Spain, forecasters have said.

BBC forecaster Chris Fawkes said: "The weather in the UK has gone from something like being stuck in a deep freezer to something unusually warm.

"With air coming up from north Africa and Spain across England and Wales that's where the temperatures are at their most unusual.

"Temperatures will probably reach 18C across parts of east of England which is very unusual for February." 

UK weather forecast for Friday 26 February - Light winds and plenty of sunshine

Only two weeks ago a big freeze sparked travel chaos and banks of snow were said to be 70cm tall in some areas, or waist-deep.

READ MORE SUN STORIES

Temperatures plunged to -23C, making it the coldest night in 26 years.

The cold snap even saw the River Thames freeze over for the first time in 60 years as the Beast from the East 2 continued to blast Britain.

Topics