Climate · Americas
Miami climate, year-round
United States · Tropical wet/dry · Updated May 2026
Best months
Nov · Dec · Jan · Feb · Mar · Apr
Best for: Tropical nomads who want US-banking and Spanish-business culture with hurricane risk priced in.
Year at a glance
Cells coloured by typical daytime average temperature. ★ = best months for nomads.
Jan
21°C
73%
2mm
Feb
21°C
70%
2mm
Mar
23°C
68%
2mm
Apr
25°C
67%
3mm
May
27°C
70%
5mm
Jun
28°C
73%
8mm
Jul
29°C
73%
6mm
Aug
29°C
75%
7mm
Sep
28°C
76%
8mm
Oct
27°C
73%
6mm
Nov
25°C
73%
3mm
Dec
22°C
73%
2mm
Summer peak
29°C
July · 73% humidity
Winter low
21°C
January · 73% humidity
Climate type
Tropical wet/dry
Moderate summers, Moderate winters
Field notes
Effectively two seasons — warm-dry (November–April, 21–25°C, low rain) and hot-wet (May–October, 27–29°C with afternoon thunderstorms basically daily). Hurricane season (June–November) is the structural risk; insurance has climbed sharply since 2017. King-tide flooding is the slow-motion climate event reshaping coastal real estate.
Visa for nomads
Low nomad-friendlyPathway
Extendable tourist
Program
—
Typical max stay
6 months
ESTA Visa Waiver (90 days) for most western passports, no extensions in-country; B-2 visitor visa up to 6 months. No US digital-nomad visa exists. Long-term residence requires H-1B / O-1 / EB green-card paths.
Editorial summary, not legal advice. Verify with the relevant consulate before applying — visa programs change with little notice.
Cost of living in Miami: ~$4,090/mo
Mid-tier monthly across rent, food, transport, utilities, and coworking.
Cities with a similar climate
Editorial estimates aggregated from public climatological summaries — typical monthly averages, not forecasts. Treat as order-of-magnitude. Microclimate, altitude, and recent extreme weather can swing these values significantly.