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42°C and Counting - What Experts Just Revealed About Hyderabad Will Make You Never Want to Step Outside

Hyderabad faces a brutal heatwave, with experts forecasting temperatures soaring to 42°C, high humidity, and no rain in sight. Authorities urge residents to stay indoors and stay hydrated.

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Dumtika Editorial

April 15, 2026 · 1 min read

42°C and Counting - What Experts Just Revealed About Hyderabad Will Make You Never Want to Step Outside

(Image: Dumtika Editorial)

You might want to sit down for this. Actually, sit down near an AC, because what weather experts just revealed about Hyderabad's next two weeks is the kind of news that makes you want to cancel everything and hibernate indoors.

It started quietly. A few extra degrees here, a little more sweat there. But now, the numbers are out and they're ugly. Forecasts show Hyderabad's daytime temperatures rocketing past 40°C and charging toward a brutal 42°C by the end of April. That's not summer. That's punishment.

And here's the part nobody wants to hear: there's practically zero chance of rain for the rest of the month. No surprise showers. No cloudy afternoons. Nothing. Just an endless, blazing sky and roads hot enough to fry an egg on, though honestly, who'd want to stand outside long enough to try?

But the real kicker? It's the humidity. With moisture levels sitting stubbornly between 65% and 72%, the heat doesn't just hit you, it wraps around you like a blanket you never asked for. That 40°C on the thermometer? It'll feel closer to 45°C on your skin.

Health officials are already sounding alarms. Power consumption is set to skyrocket, water shortages are creeping in, and outdoor workers and senior citizens face serious risks. Hospitals across the city are quietly preparing for a surge in heat-related cases. Your electricity bill this month? Let's just say, don't open it near anything breakable.

The advice is simple, stay hydrated, avoid stepping out between 12 and 4 PM, and keep those inverters charged. Because Hyderabad's infamous summer hasn't even peaked yet.

What's coming next week could be even worse. And that's the part that should genuinely worry you.