35.5°
33.0°
31.2°
22.0°
29.7°
31.5°
33.7°
34.4°
32.7°
34.0°
33.9°
31.5°
31.5°
33.7°
35.2°
31.7°
31.8°
33.5°
31.2°
31.2°
32.4°
31.2°
31.6°
31.9°
30.6°
29.0°
29.8°
31.7°
30.8°
33.0°
31.8°
35.7°
● LIVE9 km/h5 min

Temp

< 24°C Cool
24–27°C Mild
27–30°C Warm
30–33°C Hot
33–36°C V. Hot
> 36°C Extreme

Wind & temp: Open-Meteo · Radar: RainViewer · Map: OpenFreeMap

Philippines Live Weather Radar Map

This interactive weather radar map shows real-time precipitation, animated wind flow, and temperature conditions across the Philippines. The map is powered by MapLibre GL for smooth, street-level zoom, with weather data sourced from Open-Meteo and RainViewer's global radar network.

Use the layer buttons on the left to switch between Wind, Temperature, Rain, and Radar views. The wind layer shows animated particle trails representing actual wind speed and direction — white particles indicate calm conditions, while yellow and orange particles indicate stronger winds associated with monsoon activity or approaching typhoons.

How to Use the Wind Flow Map

The animated wind particles on this map are driven by real forecast wind data from the Open-Meteo weather model. Each particle represents the direction and relative speed of wind at that location. Faster-moving particles with warmer colours (yellow, orange) indicate higher wind speeds.

During typhoon season (June to November), the wind map is particularly useful for tracking the circulation pattern of tropical cyclones. A clear cyclonic rotation — particles spiralling inward in a counter-clockwise direction — indicates the presence of a low-pressure system or tropical cyclone in the area.

Use the Temperature layer to see colour-coded temperature badges for over 30 Philippine cities, updated every 5 minutes. The Wind toggle button in the left panel switches the animated wind overlay on and off independently of the active data layer.

Understanding Philippine Rainfall Radar

The Rain Radar layer displays near-real-time precipitation data from RainViewer, which aggregates radar returns from weather stations across the Philippines and neighbouring countries. Blue and green areas indicate light to moderate rainfall, while yellow, orange, and red areas indicate heavy to very heavy rainfall that may cause localised flooding.

In the Philippines, the most dangerous rainfall events are often associated with the interaction of a tropical cyclone and the southwest monsoon (Habagat). This combination can produce extreme rainfall totals exceeding 200 mm in 24 hours over parts of Luzon and Visayas, leading to flash floods and landslides. Monitor the radar regularly during active weather events and heed all PAGASA flood warnings.

Data sources: Wind and temperature data from Open-Meteo (updated hourly). Radar imagery from RainViewer. Base map tiles from OpenFreeMap. For official PAGASA radar, visit pagasa.dost.gov.ph.