Historical weather data, all-time temperature records, and monthly climate averages for New Albany, IN. Explore typical weather conditions by week for trip planning, and see how today compares to the historical record.
April 4 in New Albany sits right in the heart of the year's rainiest stretch — there's a 55% chance of precipitation today, and historically that's par for the course. Temperatures typically land around 68° for a high and 45° for a low, though this date has swung wildly: a balmy 81° in 2012 and a teeth-chattering 28° just one year later in 2013.
New Albany plays for keeps on the extremes — the thermometer has hit 108° and bottomed out at -6°, a 114-degree range that captures just how much this Ohio River city feels every season. A single September day in 2002 dropped 5.75 inches of rain, and an early spring storm in March 1968 buried the city under 9.8 inches of snow.
Summer is the main event in New Albany, with highs averaging 90° during the hottest week of mid-July, while mid-January brings a cool but manageable 41°. Spring and fall offer the most comfortable stretches, with April and October highs in the upper 60s to low 70s — though April is also the wettest time of year, so pack accordingly.