Safety

Dolomites weather and afternoon storms — how to read the day

How Dolomites weather works in summer: the daily storm pattern, which forecasts to trust, what to do if you're caught above tree line, and snow timing on the high passes.

Updated: 2026-06-01 7 min read

Almost every avoidable accident on the Alte Vie comes from one cause: a walker who started late, ignored a building cloud, and got caught on a ridge in an afternoon thunderstorm. The pattern is so predictable that locals plan around it without thinking. This guide is that planning, written out.

The standard summer day

From mid-July to late August the typical Dolomites weather day looks the same: clear and cold at dawn, sunny and warming through mid-morning, scattered cumulus building from around 12:00, towering cumulonimbus over the high peaks by 14:00–15:00, and a 30–60 minute storm with lightning, hail and a sharp temperature drop between 14:00 and 17:00. Then it clears again by evening.

The implication for walking: leave the hut by 7:00, take your big ascent in the morning, and be off any exposed ridge, summit or via ferrata by 13:00. Treat 14:00 as the cut-off for the day's hard work, not the start of the afternoon.

Which forecasts to trust

Three sources cover the Dolomites well, all free and in English where possible.

Rifugio wardens look at the same three regional sites every evening and give an honest opinion at dinner. Ask. 'Che tempo fa domani?' is enough; the answer will be more useful than any app.

  • ARPAV (meteo.arpav.it) — Veneto regional service, best for Cortina, Belluno, Civetta, Schiara.
  • Meteo Trentino (meteotrentino.it) — best for Brenta, Marmolada, San Martino, Pale.
  • Provincia Bolzano (provincia.bz.it/meteo) — best for the north: Braies, Sesto, Val Gardena, Alpe di Siusi.
  • Mountain-Forecast.com and Meteoblue give peak-specific forecasts in English — useful, but cross-check with the regional service rather than trust them alone.

Reading the sky in real time

Cumulus growing vertically into anvils with hard edges by 12:00 means a storm by 15:00 — descend now. Lenticular clouds (smooth lens shapes) on the high peaks mean strong winds aloft; not immediately dangerous but uncomfortable on ridges. A general grey ceiling with no convection often passes without thunderstorms — colder and wetter, less electrically dangerous.

Wind dropping suddenly and the air going still and warm in the early afternoon is the classic pre-storm signal in the mountains. Move.

Caught on a ridge

If you can hear thunder, you're already within strike range — the rule of thumb is 10 km per 30 seconds between flash and rumble. Get off the summit, off the ridge, and off any via ferrata cable (which conducts) immediately. Drop 50–100 metres of elevation if possible.

If you can't descend, find a position low and away from the highest point: crouch on your pack with your feet together, knees up, hands off the ground. Don't shelter under an isolated tree or a cave entrance — both attract strikes. Stay 30 metres apart from your companions so a single strike can't take the whole group.

Snow and the high passes

First snow on the highest passes (above 2,800 m) is possible from 1 September and likely from 20 September. By 15 October the high routes are usually snowbound and impassable without winter gear.

Spring snow lingers in north-facing couloirs into early July in heavy winters. The passes most prone to late snow are Forcella del Lago and Forcella Marmolada (AV2), Forcella del Marmarole (AV4), and the col between Tissi and Vazzoler on AV1. Phone the relevant rifugi a week ahead in June and ask about conditions.

FAQ

What time do thunderstorms hit in the Dolomites?

Most commonly between 14:00 and 17:00 in July and August. The standard plan is to leave the rifugio by 7:00, finish the hardest climb by lunch, and be off any exposed ridge by 13:00.

What's the best weather app for the Dolomites?

Use the regional Italian services (ARPAV for Veneto, Meteo Trentino for Trentino, Provincia Bolzano for South Tyrol) — they're more accurate than international apps. Mountain-Forecast.com is a useful English-language second opinion.

What do I do if a thunderstorm catches me on a via ferrata?

Unclip and descend immediately if there's any reasonable downward route — the steel cable is the worst possible thing to be attached to in lightning. If you can't descend, get off the cable, drop below the ridge crest, crouch on your pack and wait it out.

Is it safe to hike in the Dolomites in the rain?

Light rain is fine on graded trails. Heavy rain turns scree paths into greasy slides and floods the karst sinkholes on the limestone plateaus. Thunderstorms, not the rain itself, are the real danger.

Routes to apply this on

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