A village in the north of Scotland has provisionally set a new UK January temperature record of 19.9C, the Met Office has said. Achfary, in Sutherland, recorded the temperature on Sunday, beating the previous high of 19.6C reported at Kinlochewe in the north-west Highlands, also yesterday.
Prior to the weekend, the record of 18.3C was held by the villages of Inchmarlo and Aboyne in Aberdeenshire, which hit that figure in 2003; and Aber, Ceredigion, which reached the same level in both 1958 and 1971.
In a post on X on Monday, the Exeter-based Met Office said: “A manual reading at Achfary, a site in north-west Scotland, has come in today with a temperature of 19.9C on Sunday, provisionally setting a new UK maximum temperature record for January. This exceeds the automated reading of 19.6C reported yesterday at Kinlochewe.”
A Met Office spokesman said a meteorological phenomenon known as the Foehn effect is behind the high temperatures. He said: “It’s very similar to the information from Kinlochewe, the provisional temperature record is driven by the Foehn effect.”
This occurs when air is forced over a mountain range and warms, moving down the other side, causing a rise in temperatures. The spokesperson said: “The increased heat and clear skies allow more solar radiation to come in and boost the temperatures as well.”
He said the previous record temperatures in January were also attributed to the same phenomenon. He said the provisional record will be checked by the verification team who “will be going to visit sites and check the calibration of the equipment over the next couple of days”.
Temperatures in Devon didn’t reach those heights, but have been in the mid-teens in places. And more mild spells of weather are set to follow, with the Met Office predicting similarly warm for this time of years temperatures for the South West
A spokesperson added: “Tuesday will be a much brighter day to come with sunny spells, these most prolonged in western areas. Less mild but temperatures still a little above average. Winds becoming light later.



