Idaho, USA · The Gem State
weather across idaho — the state from the snake river plain to the panhandle.
Idaho is geographically diverse for the Mountain West — the southern Snake River Plain (Boise) sits in semi-arid continental basin conditions, while the northern Idaho Panhandle (Coeur d’Alene) experiences Pacific-modified Inland Northwest climate moderated by Lake Coeur d’Alene and the Bitterroot Mountains. The state contains the Sawtooth Range, the Salmon River canyons, and the dramatic terrain that defines the Mountain West interior.
The seasons, honestly
seasons in idaho.
Idaho seasons divide the state into two completely different patterns. Southern Idaho follows the semi-arid continental basin pattern — the Snake River Plain sits in the rain shadow of the Cascades and the Blue Mountains, producing dry summers, cold winters, and the wildfire smoke season that defines July through October. Boise averages just 12 inches of annual rainfall, comparable to Las Vegas.
Northern Idaho follows a Pacific-modified Inland Northwest pattern — more annual precipitation (Coeur d’Alene averages 26 inches), milder winters thanks to Lake Coeur d’Alene moderation, and the Bitterroot Mountain orographic enhancement that produces some of the heaviest snowfall in Idaho at the Schweitzer Mountain Resort. The Idaho Panhandle latitude (47–49°N) gives the region long high-latitude summer twilights.
Fall (September–October) is the second perfect window across the state. Peak foliage in the Sawtooth Range and the central Idaho mountains runs from late September through mid October. Winter (November–April) supports the state’s significant ski industry centered on Sun Valley, Schweitzer Mountain, and the Sawtooth Range. The southern basin valleys experience cold-air pool inversions; the northern mountains experience true continental winter conditions.
Defining weather events
what the sky does in idaho.
Idaho weather is defined by the Cascade and Bitterroot rain shadow effect. Pacific air masses crossing the western US lose most of their moisture before reaching Idaho, producing the semi-arid continental conditions that define the southern Snake River Plain. The Boise basin sits in some of the driest territory in the Mountain West, with the wildfire smoke season from July through October a routine feature of the climate.
The Bitterroot Mountains and the central Idaho ranges produce the second mechanism: orographic enhancement on west-flow events, dramatic snowfall at the high elevations supporting Sun Valley and Schweitzer Mountain, and the Idaho ski industry that derives from the consistent winter pattern. The Sawtooth Range produces some of the most photographed alpine scenery in the Mountain West.
Lake Coeur d’Alene in the Idaho Panhandle produces local thermal modulation that distinguishes the Panhandle climate from southern Idaho. The lake is the only major body of water in Idaho and produces modest lake breeze cooling on hot summer afternoons.
Pacific air masses crossing the Cascades and the Bitterroot Mountains lose most of their moisture before reaching Idaho. Boise averages just 12 inches of annual rainfall — comparable to Las Vegas — and the Snake River Plain sits in classic semi-arid basin conditions.
Idaho experiences major wildfire seasons across the central and northern forests. The Salmon-Challis National Forest, the Frank Church-River of No Return Wilderness, and the Idaho Panhandle all produce smoke that settles into the basin valleys for weeks at a time during peak fire years.
The central Idaho mountains around Sun Valley and the northern Idaho Selkirk Range support a real ski industry. Sun Valley averages 220 inches of annual snowfall; Schweitzer Mountain averages 300 inches per year. The Sawtooth Range produces alpine winter conditions.
The Boise basin and the Treasure Valley experience winter cold-air pool inversions that trap haze and pollution in the valley while the surrounding hills remain in clean air. Inversions can persist for days at a time.
Continental polar air masses descending from Canada produce sub-zero stretches across Idaho, particularly in the central and northern mountain valleys. The Idaho Panhandle experiences sustained cold during major polar vortex events.
Best cities, by season
where to be in idaho.
Idaho’s best season is fall in both ends of the state — the wildfire smoke has cleared, the temperatures have moderated, and the dramatic mountain terrain produces some of the most photographed fall scenes in the Mountain West.
What other weather apps get wrong
why idaho needs a different forecast.
Generic weather apps treat Idaho as one mountain state. They show "cold and snowy" for Boise and Coeur d’Alene as if both are the same forecast when Boise sits in the semi-arid Snake River Plain at 2,720 feet and Coeur d’Alene sits in the Pacific-modified Idaho Panhandle 400 miles north.
They miss that the Bitterroot rain shadow is dramatic enough to produce Las Vegas-comparable annual precipitation in Boise, that the Idaho ski industry depends on the orographic snow at Sun Valley and Schweitzer, and that the wildfire smoke season is a real meteorological event affecting the entire state from July through October. AccuWeather treats Twin Falls and Sandpoint as the same forecast despite very different geography.
The Vesper Brief reads Idaho as the bisected state it actually is — semi-arid Snake River Plain south, Pacific-modified Inland Northwest north — and writes the rain shadow and the wildfire smoke as the meteorological events they actually are.
Unlike Apple Weather, Vesper writes for the part of Idaho you actually stand in.
What is the weather like in Idaho?
Idaho has two distinct climate regions. Southern Idaho (Boise, Twin Falls) experiences a semi-arid continental climate in the Snake River Plain rain shadow, with hot dry summers and cold winters. Northern Idaho (Coeur d’Alene, Sandpoint) experiences a Pacific-modified Inland Northwest climate with more precipitation, lake-moderated winters, and the Bitterroot Mountain orographic enhancement. The state averages just 18 inches of annual precipitation in the south but over 26 in the north.
Frequently asked
about idaho weather.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why is Boise so much drier than northern Idaho?
Boise sits in the rain shadow of the Cascade Range and the Blue Mountains, producing semi-arid conditions with just 12 inches of annual rainfall — comparable to Las Vegas. Northern Idaho receives more Pacific moisture because the rain shadow effect is less complete at higher latitudes, with Coeur d’Alene averaging 26 inches per year.
How much snow does Sun Valley get?
Sun Valley averages about 220 inches of annual snowfall, supporting one of the oldest and most famous ski destinations in the western US. The combination of the central Idaho mountain elevation and the orographic enhancement on Pacific air masses produces dramatic powder snow conditions. The resort has been operating since 1936.
When is wildfire smoke season in Idaho?
Wildfire smoke season in Idaho runs from July through early October, with peak smoke events typically in August and September. The Salmon-Challis National Forest, the Frank Church-River of No Return Wilderness, and the Idaho Panhandle all produce smoke that affects the entire state. The smoke typically clears with the first significant fall cold front.
How does the Idaho Panhandle climate differ from southern Idaho?
The Idaho Panhandle (Coeur d’Alene, Sandpoint) experiences a Pacific-modified Inland Northwest climate with more annual precipitation, milder winters thanks to lake moderation, and the Bitterroot Mountain orographic enhancement. Southern Idaho (Boise, Twin Falls) experiences a semi-arid continental climate in the Cascade rain shadow with hot dry summers and cold winters with basin inversions.
What is Idaho’s ski industry like?
Idaho has a significant ski industry centered on Sun Valley (the original American destination ski resort, opened 1936), Schweitzer Mountain (the largest ski area in the Idaho Panhandle), Bogus Basin (just outside Boise), and several smaller mountain resorts. The combination of orographic snow on Pacific air masses and the dramatic Sawtooth and Bitterroot terrain supports a real winter ski season from November through April.
What makes Vesper different from other weather apps?
Vesper replaces template-driven forecasts with short editorial briefs written in an authorial voice, and publicly grades its own sunset predictions through Sunset Verify. Every other weather app on the market generates its text by filling variables into a template. Vesper writes each forecast as original prose with a point of view about the day.
Is Vesper free?
Vesper is free to download with core weather features. Premium features and pricing will be announced at launch.
What is Sunset Verify?
Sunset Verify is Vesper's signature feature that predicts sunset quality each day from live atmospheric data and lets users verify the prediction with a photo, building a personal accuracy track record over time.
When will Vesper be available?
Vesper is currently in beta. Join the waitlist at vespersky.ai/beta to get early access and be notified when the app launches on iOS and Android.
What does it mean for a weather app to be editorial?
An editorial weather app applies a point of view to the same atmospheric data every other app has. Instead of showing you a grid of numbers, it writes a short brief — two or three sentences with intent — about what the day is going to feel like and what you should probably do about it. The data is identical. The voice is the product.
How does Vesper write a brief if it is not a human writer?
Vesper's briefs are generated by a language model operating under an editorial style guide written by people and refined through thousands of examples. The style guide, cut discipline, and voice rules are the content. The model is the mechanism. Template weather apps are generated by models that were never given an editorial style guide, which is why they all sound identical.
Does Vesper have radar maps or severe weather alerts?
Vesper does not ship radar maps or a proprietary severe weather alert system. Severe weather alerts come through the operating system, which is the right place for them. Radar was rejected because a radar map is not a brief and would not make the forecast more worth reading. We respect both as product decisions. We are doing something different.
Which cities does Vesper cover?
Vesper publishes editorial weather coverage for over 100 US cities with full daily briefs and all 50 state hubs with region-specific editorial context. The mobile app gives you a brief wherever you are — anywhere Vesper has weather data coverage, which is essentially every populated area in the world.
Is my location data private on Vesper?
Yes. Vesper uses your approximate location only to deliver weather forecasts for your area. Location data is not stored on our servers, not sold, and not shared with third parties. Photos taken through Sunset Verify stay on your device and never leave your phone.
How often does the Vesper Brief update?
A fresh editorial brief is generated every morning based on that day’s forecast. Inside the app, live conditions update continuously based on your location. The editorial brief is a once-a-day artifact — written to be read in the morning, not refreshed hourly.
Can I use Vesper without an account?
Yes. Vesper does not require an account to read the daily brief, check sunset predictions, or use the editorial features. Personal data like Sunset Verify history is stored locally on your device, so there is no cloud account to create.
Get Vesper
your first idaho brief, on us.
Join the waitlist and we’ll send your first Idaho brief the morning the app goes live.