Tadoba Andhari Tiger Reserve Weather — Live Conditions, 14-Day Forecast & 25-Year Climate History
Tadoba Weather Now
Moharli Gate Corridor — 20.2642° N, 79.3364° E
Establishing meteorological connection ...
Connection Interrupted
We are unable to connect to the meteorological service. Please check your network connection or try again shortly.
Tadoba's Monthly Climate
What's Tadoba actually like month by month? We looked at the last 25 years of daily min/max temperatures, rainfall and humidity and averaged them by month. Very helpful if you are planning a trip to Tadoba.
Tadoba's Monthly Rhythm
Each Month - Past 25 Years till Today
Monthly averages for temperature range, rainfall, and humidity across Tadoba (2000 – 2025)
May is historical Tadoba at its most extreme: the heat is at its highest, the water at its lowest. That is precisely when the tiger is easiest to find. The monsoon breaks in June and changes everything. Rain pulls the temperature down, fills the lakes, and sends the animals deeper into the canopy. Tadoba becomes lush and harder to read. By November, the water has settled, the heat has eased, and the reserve opens again - cooler, quieter, and sharply focused around what remains.
PICK A MONTH · SEE HOW IT COMPARES
Were the Last 12 Months Normal?
Daily temperatures and total rainfall for any month, measured against 25 years of Tadoba weather records. Choose a month to see how it actually played out.
FUTURE PROJECTIONS & ECOLOGICAL SHIFTS
Tadoba Climate Projection
Let’s take a peek 25 years into the future. Here’s what predictions from 40 climate supercomputers suggest Tadoba could look like compared to the past 25 years. Remember, these are probabilities, not forecasts.
Is Tadoba Getting Hotter?
50-year average temperature range, showing decadal historical shifts and future waypoints.
So? Is Tadoba Getting Hotter then?
Yes. Over the past 25 years, average min/max temperatures have risen by 1°C and are projected over the coming 25 years to rise by another 1.7°C (totaling 2.7°C) for daytime highs, and about 3.2°C for nighttime lows. In short: Tadoba continues to get gradually warmer. What stands out is that nights seem to be warming faster than days. For Tadoba, a forest ecosystem that depends on cool nights for recovery from daytime heat, this matters more than the daytime highs.
Is Tadoba Heating Up Year-Round?
50-year temperature trend, comparing 25 years of history with 25 years of projections.
So? Is Tadoba Getting Hotter Year-Round then?
Yes, every month warms — but not equally. The pre-monsoon heat (March to May) intensifies the most, with projected highs pushing further into the low 40s. Monsoon months warm least during the day because rain and cloud cover act as a natural ceiling — but even those months see warmer nights. Across the board, nighttime minimums are rising faster than daytime maximums, which means the forest gets less overnight relief from heat than it used to.