The Met Office has rubbished reports of a four-day arctic blast said to be hitting the UK by the end of the month.
The forecaster said there were no signs of snow across the country with temperatures set to remain around average for this time of year.
It comes after reports suggested the UK would see up to 30 centimetres of snow with temperatures as low as -6C by 20 November.
“There is no sign of snow in the current forecast period, but there is a bit of a change on the way over the next few days,” Met Office spokesperson Stephen Dixon said.
“The current cloudy conditions with patchy bits of drizzle will break up early next week to bring some sunny skies for much of the UK on Monday.
Friday continues the theme we’ve seen for much of the last fortnight, with anticyclonic gloom persisting for most ☁️
But the sunshine will break through for northern Scotland and parts of northwest England 🌤️ pic.twitter.com/3pmLpMabax
— Met Office (@metoffice) November 8, 2024
“This will bring in some chillier conditions, but many will likely enjoy the reemergence of the Sun after a somewhat gloomy start to November.”
Mr Dixon said further unsettled weather in northwestern parts of the country could be possible in the second half of November, with the chance of it spreading further south at times.
He added that temperatures were likely to be around average for most, with the possibility of cooler periods at times.
The reports of heavy snow cited data from the website WXCharts – which visualises different models of future weather patterns from forecasters around the world.
However, a one-off weather model is not a forecast. Organisations like the Met Office run hundreds of weather models to predict future patterns.
The data presented by WXCharts was not false – but it is inaccurate to then report a single weather model from that data as a forecast.
Five-day forecast
Today:
Most areas will have a dry but cloudy and cool day, with hill fog in places. It will be breezy in the west, with patchy drizzle most likely here too. Northern Scotland will see some sunshine. Local brighter breaks elsewhere.
Tonight:
Remaining cloudy in most areas with hill fog and patchy light rain or drizzle. Northern Scotland will hold onto the best of the cloud breaks, with a patchy frost forming.
Saturday:
Another grey day for many with the odd spot of light rain or drizzle. However, northern Scotland will continue to see some sunshine, and a few brighter spells developing elsewhere.
Outlook for Sunday to Tuesday:
A band of light rain will move southeastwards across the UK on Sunday, introducing drier and sunnier, though cooler weather for the start of next week. Patchy fog and frost.