Santaquin, Utah Weather
Pikas hayfeeding in granite peaks. Day 76 of spring. Read this microseason across nine climate regions →
Santaquin weather forecast — hour by hour, 7-day outlook, NOAA radar
- TodayJun 3Overcast——89°57°—
- ThursdayJun 4Overcast——89°70°0°
- FridayJun 5Clear——86°63°-3°
- SaturdayJun 6Overcast——90°65°+4°
- SundayJun 7Overcast——84°53°-6°
- MondayJun 8Partly Cloudy——82°47°-2°
- TuesdayJun 9Overcast——85°60°+3°
Ozone at AQI 70 — peak already passed at 1 PM under clear skies. AQI up 15 in the last 6 hours — air quality is degrading. Levels should ease through evening.
OK No precautions needed for the general population; unusually sensitive individuals may consider limiting prolonged outdoor exertion.
What's driving it
Ozone × UV × Sky
Ozone at AQI 70 — peak already passed at 1 PM under clear skies. Levels should ease through evening.
- Present
- AQI 70
- UV peak
- 5.4 at earlier today
- Sky at peak
- clear
- Projected peak
- AQI 70
PM × Wind × Precip
PM2.5 at 6.4 µg/m³, PM10 at 18.3 µg/m³ — typical background levels with no transport signature.
- PM2.5/PM10
- 0.35
- Wind
- calm
- Recent rain
- 0h in last 6h
- Pattern
- background
Trends
Seven days of AQI and PM2.5.
Hourly air-quality data from the Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service, charted across the past and next several days. Dashed lines mark the AQI breakpoints at 50 (Good → Moderate) and 100 (Moderate → Unhealthy for Sensitive Groups).










































The higher the clouds, the finer the weather.
- Moonrise
- 5:21 AM
- Moonset
- 2:29 PM
- In sign
- ♑︎ Capricorn
Pikas hayfeeding in granite peaks
Santaquin at a glance
- Today vs. normal: 10°F above the seasonal normal for this latitude
- Last frost: April 16 (climatological average for this latitude)
- Microseason: Jun 1–5
- Planting window: Harvest spring lettuce before it bolts. Sow heat-tolerant greens.
Right now in the garden
Warm-season window is open
As of June 3, the last spring frost has passed for most years. Transplant tomatoes, peppers, eggplants, basil, and cucurbits (cucumbers, squash, melons) now. Direct-sow beans and corn into warm soil.
Planting calendar
| Month | Plant | Harvest |
|---|---|---|
| January | — | — |
| February | — | — |
| March | — | — |
| April | lettuce, peas, spinach, radishes | — |
| May | lettuce, peas, spinach, radishes, tomatoes, peppers, beans, squash | lettuce, peas, radishes |
| June | tomatoes, peppers, beans, squash | lettuce, peas, radishes |
| July | tomatoes, peppers, beans, squash | tomatoes, beans, summer squash |
| August | — | tomatoes, beans, summer squash |
| September | fall brassicas, garlic (overwinter), carrots | tomatoes, beans, summer squash |
| October | fall brassicas, garlic (overwinter), carrots | winter squash, tomatoes (last) |
| November | — | — |
| December | — | — |
A year in weather
Santaquin's warmest month is July (~76°F mean) and its coldest is January (~29°F). Rainfall peaks in April (2.2 inches) and bottoms out in July (0.7 inches).
| Month | Mean temp | Precip | Rainy days |
|---|---|---|---|
| January | 29° | 1.8″ | 5 |
| February | 33° | 1.6″ | 5 |
| March | 42° | 1.9″ | 5 |
| April | 48° | 2.2″ | 6 |
| May | 57° | 1.9″ | 4 |
| June | 67° | 0.9″ | 2 |
| July | 76° | 0.7″ | 2 |
| August | 75° | 0.8″ | 2 |
| September | 65° | 1.2″ | 3 |
| October | 51° | 1.8″ | 4 |
| November | 39° | 1.5″ | 4 |
| December | 29° | 1.9″ | 5 |
Regional context
Santaquin's baseline climate, derived from NOAA NCEI 1991-2020 normals at the nearest reporting station, swings from a January mean of 29°F to a July mean of 76°F — a 48°F seasonal arc typical of the mid-latitude bands. Annual precipitation runs about 18.4 inches spread across roughly 46 days with measurable rain or snow each year.
Precipitation peaks in the cool season: April averages 2.2 inches across 5.6 days with measurable rain, mostly from frontal systems and winter storms, while July bottoms out at 0.7 inches across just 1.5 rainy days during the drier warm-season stretch. The pattern groups Santaquin with places like Spring Lake, UT, Rocky Ridge, UT and Genola, UT, places whose summer-dry rhythm and cool-season-wet recharge run on the same regional storm-track exposure.
The frost-sensitive growing window opens around mid-April, when overnight lows reliably clear freezing for cool-season crops like kale, peas, spinach, and parsnips. Warm-soil crops — tomatoes, peppers, eggplant — wait until soil temperatures reach the mid-50s°F, usually two weeks past the last-frost date. The window closes around mid-November, when overnight lows resume dipping below freezing and frost-tender plants need protection or harvest. The dates above are 1991-2020 normals; in a given year either bookend can move 1-2 weeks either direction. Within Santaquin, low-lying parcels along drainage features typically lose 4-7°F of overnight low temperature versus the bench positions on calm clear nights, which shifts the working last-frost date by a week or more.
Similar climates: Spring Lake, UT, Rocky Ridge, UT, Genola, UT, Payson, UT, West Mountain, UT.
Frequently asked
- When does it freeze in Santaquin?
- Santaquin's last spring frost typically falls around mid-April, and the first fall frost arrives around mid-November.
- What is the rainy season in Santaquin?
- April is the wettest month with about 2.2 inches of rain on average; the city receives roughly 18 inches annually.
- What is the warmest month in Santaquin?
- July is typically warmest, averaging about 76°F.
- What is the coldest month in Santaquin?
- January is typically coldest, averaging about 29°F.
- When can I start a vegetable garden in Santaquin?
- Cool-season crops (peas, lettuce) can be sown around the last spring frost (mid-April); warm-season crops (tomatoes, peppers) wait until 1–2 weeks after.
- How many rainy days does Santaquin get?
- Santaquin averages about 46 rainy days per year.
- What hardiness zone is Santaquin?
- Santaquin's USDA hardiness zone is determined by its lowest average winter temperature; check the USDA's online lookup with the city ZIP for the current zone designation.
Climate
Santaquin, Utah sits in a hot desert climate zone. January means hover near 29°F while July averages 76°F — a 48°F seasonal swing.
Across the year, Santaquin receives about 18 inches of precipitation spread over roughly 46 rainy days.
The rhythm of the year is set by latitude (40.0°N), proximity to large water bodies, and elevation — all of which shape what grows here, when frost is likely, and what the weather story looks like day to day.