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Climate · Asia

Hyderabad climate, year-round

India · Tropical wet/dry (Deccan) · Updated May 2026

Best months

Nov · Dec · Jan · Feb

Best for: Deccan-plateau nomads who base through the cool dry winter window and avoid the pre-monsoon heat.

Year at a glance

Cells coloured by typical daytime average temperature. = best months for nomads.

  • Jan

    22°C

    55%

    0mm

  • Feb

    24°C

    52%

    0mm

  • Mar

    28°C

    45%

    0mm

  • Apr

    31°C

    40%

    0mm

  • May

    33°C

    45%

    2mm

  • Jun

    29°C

    65%

    4mm

  • Jul

    27°C

    72%

    4mm

  • Aug

    27°C

    72%

    4mm

  • Sep

    26°C

    72%

    4mm

  • Oct

    25°C

    68%

    2mm

  • Nov

    22°C

    65%

    1mm

  • Dec

    21°C

    62%

    0mm

Summer peak

33°C

May · 45% humidity

Winter low

21°C

December · 62% humidity

Climate type

Tropical wet/dry (Deccan)

Dry summers, Moderate winters

Field notes

Tropical wet/dry (Deccan) — defined seasons. Cool dry winter (November–February, 21–24°C average) is the postcard working window with bright sun and low humidity. Pre-monsoon hot dry stretch (March–May) is brutally hot with peaks above 40°C. Monsoon (June–September) drops temperatures meaningfully (26–29°C) but humidity rises above 70% with afternoon thunderstorms. The Deccan plateau elevation (542m) moderates what would otherwise be extreme heat.

Visa for nomads

Medium nomad-friendly

Pathway

Extendable tourist

Program

Typical max stay

6 months

Same e-Tourist Visa as Mumbai/Delhi/Bangalore — 30-day, 1-year, 5-year options available; max continuous stay 180 days. India IT-and-pharma capital with deep tech ecosystem.

Editorial summary, not legal advice. Verify with the relevant consulate before applying — visa programs change with little notice.

Cost of living in Hyderabad: ~$1,010/mo

Mid-tier monthly across rent, food, transport, utilities, and coworking.

Useful while you’re in Hyderabad

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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.