thunderstorm andaman sea phuket thailand
A cumulonimbus cloud produces a thunderstorm over the Andaman Sea off the coast of Phuket. Photograph ©2009 by Brian Cohen.

The Wettest City in Almost Every Country in The World

Which city rains supreme as the wettest in the world?

Rain, rain, go away. Come again another day. The residents of which cities around the world are likeliest to recite the chant of that classic nursery rhyme and possibly flood the weather offices with the latest updates?

To find out the answer to that question, Climate Data was used to collect the number of rainy days for 64,429 cities around the world. Note that “rainy days” consist of days with at least one millimeter of precipitation — whether rain or snow. The dataset was compiled in June 2021.

I have been given express written permission to use the maps and the verbatim text from this article from Budget Direct, which highlights the wettest cities in almost every country in the world. This information is general in nature only and does not constitute personal advice. While Budget Direct has endeavored to ensure the information provided is accurate and current, it cannot guarantee it. Neither Budget Direct nor The Gate accept liability for the information which is presented in this article.

The Wettest City in Almost Every Country in The World

Rain used to be a state of mind. Cities like Seattle and Manchester pride themselves on being the rainiest in their respective lands. But are they wrong?

Today, rain is a state of crisis. In the Chinese city of Zhengzhou, 25 inches of rain in a single day this summer claimed dozens of lives. This was in the wake of Germany’s deadliest floods in half a century. Last year, enough rain to fill Loch Ness fell on the UK in 24 hours, the country’s wettest day on record.

The climate crisis has intensified the likelihood of heavy rainfall around the world. To see where it’s falling, Neomam Studios, on behalf of Budget Direct, has used Climate Data to count the number of rainy days per year (with at least 1 mm of rain or snow) for 64,429 cities around the world.

Key Findings

  • The wettest city in the world is Buenaventura, where it rains 258 days per year.
  • Australia’s rainiest city is Cairns in Queensland, with 117 days of precipitation.
  • The UK’s wettest city is Londonderry in Northern Ireland (147 days).
  • The wettest city in the US is Hilo, Hawaii (211 days).
  • The world’s least rainy ‘wettest cities’ are Riffa (Bahrain) and Al Khor (Qatar), with 10 rainy days each.

The World’s Rainiest Cities

This map shows the cities with the highest amount of rainy (>1mm precipitation) days per year in every country. The red and pink sections suggest the north of Africa is the driest region. The darker blue identifies parts of Asia and South America to have the wettest cities.

a map of the world
Click on the map for an enlarged version. Source: Budget Direct.

It might be a surprise to see snowy Greenland among the driest areas. In fact, the sea air cools the climate and dries the air, reducing precipitation. However, the weather is very changeable in Greenland and susceptible to climate change. Rain is becoming more common, and rain, in turn, melts the falling snow, contributing further to warming. However, Greenland’s 2021 spring was good for snowfall – which contributes to our ‘wetness’ factor.

a chart with a city in the background
Click on the map for an enlarged version. Source: Budget Direct.

At the wet end of the scale, however, is Buenaventura, the rainiest city on Earth. And when you allow multiple cities from each country into the equation, a Colombian city also takes second place: Manizales. The Andes act as a natural barrier to moist air, which expresses as rain during multiple rainy seasons across Colombia. Buenaventura is particularly vulnerable due to its location.

Australia’s Wettest Cities Clustered in the North

Australia is not known for its rain. In fact, we found 125 countries with a rainier ‘wettest city’ than Australia’s. But that doesn’t mean you should leave your umbrella at home. Australia’s rain capital, Cairns, suffers 117 rainy days per year. Of course, it depends on the time of year: Cairns’ tropical climate makes for a dry winter and a rainy season featuring tropical monsoons and cyclones from November to March.

a chart with a city skyline
Click on the map for an enlarged version. Source: Budget Direct.

Queensland cities share the honours with Australia’s ‘Top End’ – the neighbouring Northern Territory, where Darwin and Palmerston take second and third place. There are upwards of 100 days of rain in Top End cities every year – but get your timing right, and a visit to the territory will be a sensual treat of saturated natural colours, warm beating rain, and thundering waterfalls.

Hawaii and Alaska are the Wettest States in the US

Our next data visualisation illustrates the respective raininess of the wettest cities in every American state. The outlying states of Hawaii and Alaska have significantly rainier cities than the rest of the US. Moisture floats off the Pacific and up slopes of Mauna Loa and Mauna Kea before condensing over Hilo, Hawaii’s biggest city.

a diagram of a number of states
Click on the map for an enlarged version. Source: Budget Direct.
a chart of cities
Click on the map for an enlarged version. Source: Budget Direct.

It’s a different story in Alaska. You may associate the state with ice and snow, but much of the southern part — including the Baranof Island, where Sitka is found — is dominated by temperate rainforest. It rained a record-breaking 70 days in the period from June-August 2020. “The rain has just been merciless,” said famed local author John Straley.

Costa Rica has Three Weeks More Rain than the Rest of Central America

Three cities in lower Central America stand head-and-damp-shoulders above the rest for rainfall in this region: San Vito (Costa Rica, 253 rainy days/year), El Bluff (Nicaragua, 230), and Colón (Panama, 230). These countries are on the narrowest part of the Central American isthmus, susceptible to trade winds coming in from the surrounding waters.

a map of the united states
Click on the map for an enlarged version. Source: Budget Direct.

But the US is up there, too. “Data from the recent U.S. Climate Assessment show that heavy rainfall is increasing in intensity and frequency — particularly in the U.S. Northeast,” explains Dr. David Novak of NOAA’s Weather Prediction Center. “At the same time, our vulnerability to extreme rainfall is increasing — and the effects of excessive rain are more impactful — as more people are living in low-lying areas, and land development is changing drainage patterns.”

Buenaventura, Colombia, is Wettest City in South America and the World

Colombia’s wettest city gets nearly a fortnight more wet days per year(258) than second-placed Quito, Ecuador (245). Colombia also has a claim to being the wettest place in the world – for the smaller village of Puerto Lopez. “There is a constant moist tropical onshore flow from the Pacific Ocean here,” explains weather historian Christopher C. Burt. “The mountains block that flow and almost perpetual rainfall results over Puerto Lopez. I believe it averages over 320 days of rain a year.”

a map of south america with blue and white text
Click on the map for an enlarged version. Source: Budget Direct.

Like the UK, Brazil suffered a record-breaking extreme rainfall event in 2020: 320mm in 24 hours. It was not an isolated shower. Brazilians are used to ‘summer rains’ but particularly vulnerable to flooding due to the fragility of favela settlements and Brazil’s position on the front line of climate change. For now, however, Brazil’s wettest city (Manaus, 211 days) is the seventh rainiest city in South America.

Carna, Ireland is Europe’s Wettest City

Europe’s wettest national cities are spread across the continent, with the top four covering the west (Carna, Ireland, 160 days), north (Bergen, Norway, 156), centre (Glarus, Switzerland, 153) and east (Akhaltsikhe, Georgia, 152) of the continent. The southern cities of Linares (Spain, 145) and Domodossola (Italy, 144) are also in the top 10.

a map of europe with white text
Click on the map for an enlarged version. Source: Budget Direct.
a chart with a city in the background
Click on the map for an enlarged version. Source: Budget Direct.

But it is central Europe that has hit the deadlines most recently, with hundreds killed across Germany and Belgium in the July 2021 floods – Europe’s 10th deadliest in a century. Belgium’s wettest city, Malmedy (131 days), only gets around half the rainy days of world number one Buenaventura, but the trouble is that these relatively dry European landscapes are not used to extreme rainfall, which is now occurring in widespread, sustained downfalls rather than more localised, passing thunderstorms.

Iran Experiences Highs and Lows of Middle-Eastern Rainfall

There is a significant disparity between the top rainfall in countries across the region. The wettest, Kelardasht in Iran, has 167 wet days per year, against 10 days per year in Al Khor, Qatar. Iran and Qatar may be neighbours, but Kelardasht is at the top end of Iran and on the Caspian Sea rather than the Persian Gulf.

a map of the middle east
Click on the map for an enlarged version. Source: Budget Direct.

In fact, Iran has one of the most diverse climates in the world – we found Iranian cities with as few as 10 wet days per year, too. The northwest of Iran is subtropical, the south is tropical, and the centre experiences continental and mountainous weather. The foggy city of Kelardasht is actually celebrated for its clean, breathable air, in a climate modulated by nearby jungles, mountains, and lakes.

An Indonesian City is Wettest in Rest of Asia & Oceania

Timika in Indonesia is this region’s wettest city. With a tropical rainforest climate, the city experiences 244 wet days per year. India’s wettest city is the fifth wettest rain capital in the region, with 230 days per year. India is another place with a claim to fame for wettest spot, regardless of city status: the area known as Mawsynram, a Guinness record-holder, with nearly 12 metres of rainfall per year – most of it in just six months.

a map of asia with white text
Click on the map for an enlarged version. Source: Budget Direct.

Cairns is Australia’s wettest city, with 117 days, compared to 136 for New Zealand’s wettest city, Invercargill. Of course, despite being neighbouring countries, the cities aren’t close to each other. Invercargill has a temperate oceanic climate and is nicknamed the ‘city of water and light’ for its charming twilight hours, marine reserves, and abundant rainfall.

African Cities Experience Both Extremes of Rainfall

The wettest African cities are comparable with the wettest in the Americas and Asia. However, Africa has 19 countries with fewer than 100 rainy days per year, including four with fewer than 50 rainy days.

a map of africa with white text and black numbers
Click on the map for an enlarged version. Source: Budget Direct.

Of the 10 African countries with greater than 200 days of rainfall per year, Niefang in Equatorial Guinea is the wettest (244 days per year). Being equatorial, the weather here is humid and cloudy, with a resulting lushness of vegetation.

Rain is a Deadly Necessity

The recent flooding tragedies have not occurred in isolation and are generally considered a symptom of global warming. The atmosphere can hold more water in a warming climate. That water is supplied by vapor that evaporates from the warming oceans and the drying landscapes alike.

According to one study, human influence made the Loch Ness incident 2.5 times more likely to happen. By the end of the century, these researchers predict a “10-fold increase in the chances of such extreme rainfall events.” In such conditions, preparation, insurance, and a commitment to fight climate change are our best allies.

Final Boarding Call

This article lists the wettest cities in the world — but with an average of greater than 373 inches of rain annually, Mount Waialeale in Kauai in Hawai’i is considered to be the wettest spot on the planet. As much as 683 inches of precipitation was recorded to have fallen on the summit of the mountain in 1982.

I have been to Kauai and ventured as close to the purported wettest spot on Earth as possible; but it was raining that day…

Photograph ©2009 by Brian Cohen.

  1. 3 Cheers for Brian who’s article shows Taiwan instead of toeing the Communist party line of “Taiwan is part of the People’s Republic of China”.

    Singapore is funny because that is a city state. There is no other city in Singapore but there are different neighborhoods.

    I suspect that Vaduz, Liechtenstein is wrong. I suspect that the weather station is there. There are higher elevation villages, such as Triesenburg (I am guessing the spelling, it’s not Treason-burg).

    The UK answer is controversial as the city is considered Derry by some and Londonderry by others. People on both sides have been fighting for many decades, even occasionally setting off bombs that kill many people.

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