Ontario's 2026 Summer Forecast: A changeable and reactive season ahead
Expect a summer of tug-of-war in Ontario
Welcome to our official 2026 summer forecast for Ontario.
The sneak peek was all about the setup: the drivers, the mechanics, and the atmospheric forces beginning to shape the season ahead.
Now, it’s time to reveal what folks in Ontario will actually experience this summer.
Summer personality: Noncommittal and inconsistent

The on-again, off-again summer
Heat will build at times, but interruptions are expected throughout the season
Final temperatures may finish surprisingly close to the seasonal mark overall
More days with showers and thunderstorms are expected, though that does not mean a washout, but it does mean more frequent interruptions
Cooler-than-normal Great Lakes may create early-summer shoreline chills across southern Ontario
June rainfall will be critical for northwestern Ontario. It is the wettest month of the year for much of the region, and missing out on that rainfall would have drought implications for July and August
One hot weekend won’t necessarily mean summer weather is here to stay
Your overall temperature outlook:

Your overall precipitation outlook:

Key message
The trough may decide Canada’s summer. The challenge is that it will be a moving target: oscillating, stretching, and occasionally anchoring in place.

A faster west-to-east flow lowers the odds of long-lasting, continent-wide extremes, but cut-off highs and lows can still detach from the main jet stream and create impactful stretches of heat.
We forecast the season and try to anticipate the broad patterns and themes, not the individual weekends and specific weather patterns ahead. We know one bad long weekend can reshape the reputation of an entire summer.
Could this still become a historic summer weather-wise?
It’s possible. Seasonal forecasting focuses on broad patterns and tendencies, not individual severe thunderstorms or hurricanes.
Even quieter or cooler El Niño summers can still produce historic weather events and reshape how a season is remembered. During the cooler summer of 2009, Ontario experienced the largest single-day tornado outbreak in Canadian history with 19 confirmed tornadoes. Lower overall risk never means zero risk.
To see what summer has in store for Canada as a whole, check out our national forecast here.
WATCH: Canada's overall 2026 Summer Forecast
This article was written with the guidance and forecasting of Dr. Doug Gillham, a senior meteorologist at The Weather Network.
