Historical weather data, all-time temperature records, and monthly climate averages for Toledo, OH. Explore typical weather conditions by week for trip planning, and see how today compares to the historical record.
April 5th in Toledo is a coin flip — there's a 50% chance of precipitation and a 1-in-8 shot at snow, even as highs average a mild 53°. The date has swung wildly over the years, from a bitter 19° in 1944 to a shirt-sleeve 76° in 1947.
Toledo doesn't mess around at the extremes — the city has baked at 101° (August 1951) and frozen at -13° (January 1940), a 114-degree spread that shows Lake Erie's moderating influence only goes so far. A single June day in 1944 dumped 3.41 inches of rain, and Christmas 1951 buried the city under 9.6 inches of snow.
Toledo peaks in late July, when highs average 87°, and bottoms out in early February near a frigid 32°. If you're trying to dodge rain, avoid mid-June — that's historically the wettest stretch of the year, averaging over an inch of precipitation in a single week. Spring and fall offer mild shoulder seasons, with April and October averaging highs in the upper 50s and mid-60s.