Historical weather data, all-time temperature records, and monthly climate averages for Statesboro, GA. Explore typical weather conditions by week for trip planning, and see how today compares to the historical record.
April 4th in Statesboro sits right in that sweet spot of spring, with average highs of 78° and lows around 52°. Over 101 years of records, this date has swung from a scorching 91° back in 1934 all the way down to a freezing 32° as recently as 2021. Rain is unlikely today — historically just a 22% shot — and snow is essentially off the table.
Statesboro plays in the extremes: the all-time high hit a brutal 109° on July 13, 1980, while the coldest recorded day plunged to 1° on January 21, 1985 — a 108-degree spread that tells you this is no mild climate. The wettest single day on record dumped 12.75 inches on September 27, 1929, likely from a tropical system, and even snow has made an appearance, with 5 inches falling on February 8, 1968.
Statesboro runs hot — average highs climb to 92° during the warmest week of the year in early July and don't really back off until October, when they fall back to a comfortable 79°. If you're heat-sensitive, January through March offers the most relief, with highs in the low 60s to low 70s. Late July is the wettest stretch of the year, averaging 1.37 inches per week, driven by afternoon thunderstorms typical of the Georgia summer.