Denver, Colorado Weather Records
The hottest and coldest days Denver has ever recorded — and how today compares to normal
Denver, CO · Today vs. normal
13°F below the June normal
Right now it’s 71°F in Denver — about 13° below the June normal high of 84°F.
Denver’s all-time temperature records
- Hottest day on record
- 104°Fset June 26, 1994
- Coldest day on record
- -25°Fset February 1, 1951
That is a 129°F span between the hottest and coldest days Denver has ever recorded — the full range of what its weather has done across the station’s record back to 1948.
How extreme Denver’s weather gets
Denver’s weather is usually mild by its own standards — a typical year averages a daily high near 66°F, and the normal high for June runs about 84°F. The records sit well outside that everyday range. The hottest day on record reached 104°F in 1994 — roughly 38°F above a typical year’s average high, the kind of gap that turns an ordinary summer into a genuine heat event.
At the other end, Denver has bottomed out at -25°F (1951). Together the two extremes span 129°F — the full width of what this place’s weather has done across the station’s daily record back to 1948. Those edges are exactly why the anomaly readout at the top of this page is worth a glance: it shows where today falls between the normal and the record, so a hot afternoon can be judged against the real history rather than a hunch. A reading a few degrees over the June normal is ordinary; one pushing toward the 104°F record is the rare event the record marks.
Frequently asked
- What is the hottest day ever recorded in Denver?
- Denver's hottest day on record reached 104°F, set on June 26, 1994. That is the single most extreme high in the nearest long-term weather station's full daily record — about 38°F hotter than a typical year's average high of 66°F, which is why a day like it stands out as genuinely rare rather than just a hot afternoon.
- What is the record high temperature in Denver?
- The all-time record high in Denver is 104°F, recorded on June 26, 1994. Records are drawn from the nearest long-term weather station's full daily history, so this is the hottest single day the station has ever logged — not a typical summer peak.
- What is the coldest day ever recorded in Denver?
- Denver's coldest day on record bottomed out at -25°F, set on February 1, 1951. Like the record high, it comes from the station's complete daily record, so it captures the most extreme cold the area has recorded rather than an average winter low.
- What is the record low temperature in Denver?
- The all-time record low in Denver is -25°F, recorded on February 1, 1951. The gap between that and the 104°F record high — a span of 129°F — is the full range of temperatures Denver has experienced across its long-term daily record.
- Is it normal to be this hot in Denver?
- It depends on how far above Denver's normal a given day runs. A typical year here averages a daily high near 66°F; the all-time record of 104°F (set 1994) sits about 38°F above that. The anomaly readout at the top of this page compares the current temperature against this month's normal high, so you can see exactly how unusual today is rather than guessing.
- When did Denver set its temperature records?
- Denver's record high of 104°F was set in 1994 (June 26, 1994), and its record low of -25°F in 1951 (February 1, 1951). Both are pulled from the station's complete daily record going back to 1948, so they reflect the true extremes rather than a recent or partial sample.
- Has Denver been getting hotter?
- Yes — Denver's annual mean temperature has trended about 1.1°F warmer since 1948, in line with the long-term warming seen across nearly every US city. That gradual shift in the average is separate from the all-time records above, which mark the single most extreme days rather than the trend, but a warming baseline is part of why recent years more often brush up against the record-high end.
More for Denver
See the full Denver, CO weather forecast — hour-by-hour outlook, NOAA radar, satellite, and air quality — or the broader Denver climate & weather by month for the long-run averages behind these records.