The Climate Signal Behind These Warm Winters

A Winter That Tells a Bigger Story: Santa Fe’s Warmest Seasons and the Climate Signal Behind Them
The winter of 2025–2026 finished with an average temperature of 38.8°F, making it the 4th warmest meteorological winter (December through February) ever recorded in Santa Fe. What makes that ranking especially remarkable is that it came despite a a couple of cold snaps in January that temporarily dragged down the seasonal average. Without that stretch of colder weather, this winter likely would have landed among the top three.
But the real headline isn’t just where this winter ranked.
It’s what the entire top-10 list reveals about how Santa Fe’s winter climate is changing.
The Warmest Winters Are No Longer Rare
Every one of the 10 warmest winters on record has occurred since 2000, and nine of them have happened since the winter of 2012–2013.
That kind of clustering in such a short period is not natural variability — it’s a clear climate signal.
For most of the historical record, warm winters were occasional outliers. Now they are becoming the norm. Instead of asking if a winter will be warm enough to challenge the record, we’re increasingly asking how high it will rank.
And the most recent winters have been especially notable:
- #1 – 2024–2025
- #2 – 2023–2024
- #3 – 2021–2022
- #4 – 2025–2026
That means four of the warmest winters ever recorded in Santa Fe have occurred in just the past five years.
The Role of January’s Cold Snap
This past winter is a perfect example of how the baseline has shifted.
Both December and February were the warmest on record in Santa Fe. Yet a couple of colder-than-average stretches in January were enough to keep the season from climbing even higher in the rankings.
In a colder climate, a month like that would have defined the winter. In today’s climate, it simply trims the final number slightly. That’s a powerful indication that the background temperature — the baseline — is warmer than it used to be.
The Climate Signal in Santa Fe
When we talk about a “climate signal,” we’re talking about a long-term shift that rises above year-to-year weather variability.
In Santa Fe, that signal is showing up in several clear ways.
Warmer average winter temperatures
Winters are not just occasionally warm — they are consistently warm compared to the past.
Much warmer overnight lows
Nighttime temperatures are rising faster than daytime highs.
This has a huge impact on monthly and seasonal averages and reduces the frequency of deep freezes.
Shorter and less intense cold periods
Cold snaps still happen, but:
They don’t last as long
They are more easily offset by extended warm periods
More winter days in the 50s, 60s, and even 70s
These would have been unusual in past decades. Now they occur almost every winter.
Why This Is Happening
Santa Fe sits at over 7,000 feet, so its climate is highly sensitive to temperature changes. A relatively small regional warming signal translates into a big local impact.
Several factors are contributing:
1. Long-term warming across the Southwest
Average temperatures across New Mexico and the broader Southwest have risen significantly over the past several decades. Winter is one of the fastest-warming seasons.
2. Rising overnight temperatures
Higher humidity, fewer prolonged snow-cover periods, and a warmer atmosphere all help keep nighttime temperatures from dropping as low as they once did.
3. Persistent high-pressure patterns
In recent years, we’ve seen more frequent winter ridging over the region. That brings:
- Sunshine
- Dry air
- Downslope warming
All of which push temperatures above normal.
4. Reduced snow cover
Snow reflects sunlight. Without it, the ground absorbs heat, which:
- Warms afternoons
- Leads to milder nights
This creates a feedback loop that reinforces warm winters.
What This Means for Future Winters
The most important takeaway is this:
This is no longer a short-term trend — it’s a new climate baseline.
That doesn’t mean Santa Fe won’t have cold or snowy winters again. We absolutely will. Individual seasons will still vary.
But it does mean:
- Warm winters will occur more often than cold ones
- Top-10 warmest winters will continue to cluster in the modern era
- Snowfall will depend more on storm tracks and timing, not just precipitation totals
- More winter storms will fall as rain at lower elevations
- The snow season will become shorter on average
In other words, the type of winter that once felt unusual is becoming typical.
A Shift You Can Feel
This isn’t just something that shows up in a spreadsheet.
It’s what people across Santa Fe have been noticing:
- Fewer prolonged cold stretches
- More mid-winter warm spells
- Less persistent snow cover in town
- Earlier signs of spring
The data now backs up those observations in a very clear way.
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