Night Temperature Drop Calculator

Track sunset-to-sunrise temperature loss for healthier beds today. Add clouds, wind, and humidity for context. Get clear actions for covers, watering, and timing tonight.

Calculator

Choose observed readings or estimate from conditions.

Use observed mode when you have both readings.
Please enter an evening temperature.
Required for observed mode.
Typically around sunset.
Typically around dawn.
Higher winds usually reduce sharp cooling.
Clear skies tend to cool faster.
Low spots can trap colder air.
Wet soil often cools more slowly overnight.
Cover can reduce radiative heat loss.
Presets are approximate starting points.
Used only when “Custom threshold” is selected.
Reset

Tip: For the most reliable readings, place a thermometer at plant height and shield it from direct radiation.

Formula used

The estimated mode is an approximation for garden planning. Local forecasts, microclimates, and irrigation patterns can shift temperatures significantly.

How to use this calculator

  1. Pick Observed drop if you have evening and morning/min readings.
  2. Pick Estimate minimum if you only know evening temperature and conditions.
  3. Set your start and end times to match your night window.
  4. Enter humidity, wind, and cloud cover from a nearby weather source.
  5. Select a plant sensitivity or add a custom critical temperature.
  6. Press Submit to view results and suggested actions above.

For frost-prone yards, compare several nights to learn your coldest micro-spots.

Example data table

Scenario Evening (°C) Min (°C) Hours Cloud (%) Wind (m/s) Drop (°C) Risk
Clear & calm 16 3 11.0 5 0.8 13 Chilly night
Overcast 14 9 10.0 90 1.5 5 Low
Windy 12 7 10.5 20 5.0 5 Low
Low-lying pocket 18 2 11.5 10 1.0 16 Light frost possible
Near-freezing dawn 8 -1 12.0 15 1.2 9 Frost likely

What the night drop tells you

Night temperature drop is the difference between an evening reference temperature and the overnight minimum. In gardens, a 3–6°C drop is common on partly cloudy nights, while clear, dry, calm conditions can push drops to 8–14°C. Tracking the drop helps you judge when tender crops may cross critical thresholds, even if the day felt warm. A simple log across seasons reveals patterns quickly.

Radiation cooling and cloud cover

After sunset, soil and leaves lose heat by long‑wave radiation. Clouds act like an insulating layer, reflecting radiation back toward the ground. As a rule of thumb, 0–20% cloud cover often allows the sharpest cooling, 40–70% moderates it, and 80–100% can limit drops to 1–4°C. Use cloud data to interpret why two nights with similar evening temperatures behave differently.

Humidity, dew point, and frost risk

Relative humidity influences how fast temperatures can fall and whether frost forms on surfaces. When air cools to its dew point, condensation releases latent heat that can slightly slow further cooling, yet wet surfaces can still freeze if temperatures dip below 0°C. Many gardeners see higher frost risk when humidity is moderate (40–70%) with clear skies, because rapid cooling occurs before saturation.

Wind mixing and microclimates

Wind mixes warmer air aloft with cooler air near the ground. Light winds (0–1 m/s) often allow cold air pooling in low spots, increasing local drops. Moderate winds (2–5 m/s) typically reduce extremes, while strong winds can prevent frost but may chill plants through convection. Measure or estimate wind near canopy height, since sheltered beds behave differently than open areas.

Using results for crop protection

Use the calculator’s predicted minimum and risk notes to choose actions. If the forecast minimum is within 1–2°C of a plant’s critical temperature, deploy row cover, cloches, or frost cloth before dusk. Watering soil earlier in the day can raise nighttime heat storage, while avoiding late irrigation reduces ice on foliage. Record outcomes to calibrate your site’s typical drop factors.

FAQs

Why can my garden be colder than the weather app?

Weather stations are often higher, open, and away from fences or slopes. Cold air drains into low beds and sheltered corners. Clear skies and calm winds amplify the difference, especially near dawn.

Should I use Celsius or Fahrenheit?

Use whichever matches your thermometer. The calculator converts units internally and reports both. For frost decisions, focus on the minimum temperature relative to your plant’s critical threshold.

What if I don’t know the overnight minimum?

Switch to Estimate minimum mode. Enter your evening temperature plus cloud, wind, humidity, and terrain. It provides a reasonable planning estimate, not a guaranteed forecast.

Does watering prevent frost damage?

Moist soil stores more heat and can slightly raise overnight temperatures. Water earlier in the day for best effect. Avoid spraying leaves late, because ice on foliage can worsen injury.

How do I choose a critical plant temperature?

Use a conservative value for the most sensitive crop in the bed. Examples: tomatoes often stress below 10°C, peppers below 12°C, and many annuals are damaged near 0°C. Enter a custom value if unsure.

What’s the best time window to calculate the drop?

Use a window that matches your local night cooling cycle, typically from early evening to shortly after sunrise. If you have min/max data, align start time with your evening reading time.

Built for gardeners who track microclimates across their beds.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.