Record-breaking May warmth soon to blow away as cold front moves towards eastern Australia
Eastern Australia experienced record-breaking warmth in early May, with daytime temperatures 10-14°C above average in New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia, and Tasmania. This unseasonably warm weather, driven by a high-pressure system and northerly winds, saw numerous locations record their warmest May days.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedEastern Australia experienced record-breaking warmth in early May, with daytime temperatures 10-14°C above average in New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia, and Tasmania. This unseasonably warm weather, driven by a high-pressure system and northerly winds, saw numerous locations record their warmest May days. However, this heat is set to dissipate as a cold front, formed by a merging of systems over the Southern Ocean and Western Australia, moves across South Australia and into Victoria and Tasmania. The Bureau of Meteorology forecasts thunderstorms, rain, windy conditions, and abnormally high tides over southeastern Australia this weekend and into early next week, bringing significantly cooler temperatures.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedHobart and Launceston recorded record May temperatures of 26.9C and 24.3C respectively.
Australia has had its driest April since 2018.
Daytime temperatures on Friday were 10 to 14C above average in parts of New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia and Tasmania.
Maximum temperatures in South Australia and western Victoria are expected to drop into the high teens by Sunday.
Melbourne's maximum temperature is forecast to reach 23C on Sunday before dropping to 13C by Thursday.