Open-Meteo Historical Weather

Open-Meteo Historical Weather MCP Connector for Claude

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Unlock 84 years of global weather history (1940–present): temperature, precipitation, wind, and snow data for any coordinate — the ultimate climate research companion.

3 tools Official Updated Jun 28, 2026 Official Vinkius Partner

Access 84 years of continuous weather records from 1940 to today for any location on Earth.

What you can do

  • Historical Hourly — Temperature, humidity, precipitation, snowfall, weather codes, and wind for any past date range
  • Historical Daily — Max/min temperatures, precipitation totals, sunshine duration, and dominant wind patterns
  • Temperature Trends — Dedicated tool for long-term climate trend analysis with apparent temperature data

Who is this for?

Climate researchers, agricultural analysts, insurance underwriters, real estate developers, and data scientists studying long-term weather patterns.

historical-datameteorologyclimate-sciencetime-seriesapi-integrationenvironmental-data

3 tools expose this connector's capabilities to your AI agent.

get_historical_weather

Provide latitude, longitude, start_date and end_date in YYYY-MM-DD format. Covers 84 years of global data. Get historical weather for any date range (1940–present)

get_historical_daily

Get historical daily weather aggregates

get_historical_temperature

Includes hourly temperature, apparent temperature, and dewpoint. Get historical temperature trends for climate analysis

See how to talk to your AI agent using Open-Meteo Historical Weather.

What was the weather in London on D-Day, June 6, 1944?

🏛️ **London — June 6, 1944** Max temp: 16.2°C | Min: 10.8°C Precipitation: 2.1mm (light rain) Wind: 28 km/h from the west Cloud cover: Heavy overcast Historical records confirm the famously poor weather conditions that nearly delayed the Normandy invasion.

Compare average temperatures in São Paulo between 1950 and 2020

📊 **São Paulo Temperature Trend (70 years)** 1950s avg: 19.2°C 1980s avg: 19.8°C 2010s avg: 20.6°C A clear warming trend of +1.4°C over 70 years, consistent with global urban heat island effects.

How much rain fell in Mumbai during the 2005 flood?

🌧️ **Mumbai — July 26, 2005** Daily precipitation: 944mm (one of the highest single-day totals ever recorded in India) Hourly peak: 190mm between 14:00-15:00 This catastrophic flood event displaced over 20 million people.

All the way to **January 1, 1940** — that's 84 years of continuous, hourly global weather data powered by ERA5 reanalysis from ECMWF.

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