

Punjab’s hitting late November, now seeing temps plunge fast - especially once the sun sets. In most areas, overnight lows sit between 6°C and 10°C, though places like Faridkot dipped to 6°C, making it the chilliest so far. Days stay mild, hovering near 24–28°C; however, that wide gap from day to night makes evenings feel biting. With cloudless skies overhead, almost no moisture in the air, plus still breezes, warmth vanishes quickly when darkness falls. Right now, those nighttime readings run 2–4°C under what's typical for this period, meaning winter’s bite arrived sooner than usual.
As December rolls in, it’ll get cooler without sudden deep freezes across flat areas. Daytime warmth should stay close to 24°C, though nights might fall toward 12°C, reports from AccuWeather suggest. Still, places like the lower hills and southern or central Punjab zones could see lows under 5°C on chilliest evenings - likely between Dec 16 and 20. Yet, zero degrees - or less - isn’t expected out there by year’s end. Skies? Mostly dry, which means crisp air plus sharp visibility common up north this season.
- Nov’s here: temps drop fast at night - now between 6–10° - while daytime stays mild near 24 to 28. Skies stay clear, air feels dry, nights get chilly; big swing from day to night.
- December: It gets colder, temps hit about 24°C during the day while nights drop to roughly 12°C - some areas in foothills or central and south Punjab might dip under 5°C. Still, no sign of freezing conditions across flatlands by end-of-year.
- Mostly, the region’ll see a regular north Indian winter - cold spells here or there, though big towns won’t face icy evenings.
- People need to get ready for chillier evenings, particularly starting around mid-December; however, there's no deep cold spell expected.
This prediction by IMD Chandigarh along with AccuWeather shows temps dropping fast; still, Punjab won’t hit zero degrees until after December finishes - yet the cold feel will get much stronger.