Climate Lookup > Heat Signal

London Air Conditioning Today

London, United Kingdom

25°C

Feels like 25°C

Low cooling need

31Heat load
Humidity
59%
Wind
6 kph
Condition
overcast clouds
Updated
Jul 10, 2026, 12:05 AM

Updated at: Jul 10, 2026, 12:05 AM. Source name: OpenWeather. License status: commercial_verified. Stale: no. Cache age minutes: 0. Retrieved from cache at: Jul 10, 2026, 12:06 AM.

Current heat, humidity, and cooling guidance for London, United Kingdom. Use this page to decide whether air conditioning is useful today and which cooling tradeoffs matter most.

Should you use air conditioning in London today?

Full-room air conditioning may not be necessary for every room right now, though humidity, direct sun, and sleep needs can change the decision.

The most useful number is often the feels-like temperature, not the air temperature alone. Humidity, direct sun, upper-floor apartments, poor insulation, and limited cross-ventilation can all make a room feel warmer than the outdoor reading. If the room is sun-facing or used for sleep, judge the decision by indoor comfort after several hours, not by a single outdoor snapshot.

Cooling strategy for today

Try shading, night ventilation, and fan airflow first, then use a small or efficient unit only where the room still feels uncomfortable.

For short heat events, a portable air conditioner can be a practical renter solution if the exhaust hose is short, the window panel is sealed, and the unit is not undersized. For repeated hot days, a window or split air conditioner is usually quieter and more efficient when installation is allowed. Use the BTU calculator for room size, then compare running cost with local electricity prices before buying a larger unit than the room needs.

Local climate context

Heat waves are intermittent, so renters often compare portable units, window sealing, and low-noise bedroom cooling.

Climate pages are intended for cooling decisions, not official weather warnings. During severe heat, follow local public health and weather agencies first. This page focuses on practical home cooling choices: sizing, venting, electricity cost, noise, and whether a fan, portable unit, window unit, split system, or heat pump fits the situation.

Data status

Updated at: Jul 10, 2026, 12:05 AM. Source: Weather data by OpenWeather. Source name: OpenWeather. License status: commercial_verified. Stale: no. Cache age minutes: 0. Retrieved from cache at: Jul 10, 2026, 12:06 AM. Source and cache metadata are shown so readers can judge freshness before using the weather signal for cooling decisions.

Use this city snapshot as a prompt to inspect the actual room. Outdoor heat does not describe indoor sun exposure, insulation, floor level, window leakage, or appliance heat. If the room stays warm after sunset, combine this current weather context with the BTU calculator, electricity-cost calculator, and installation guides before buying or running a unit for long periods.

Useful next steps