By Alejandra Paladino, REALTOR® | Moving to Arizona
Every person who has ever moved to Arizona has had the same conversation before their first summer. Someone who already lives here says "the heat is different, you'll need to adjust." The newcomer nods and thinks, "I've been to Vegas in July, I've been to Palm Springs, I know hot." And then June arrives.
I say this with love, because I help people relocate to Arizona every day and I want to set honest expectations: Phoenix summer heat is not what most people from California, the Midwest, or the Pacific Northwest have experienced before. It is a different category of hot, sustained, intense, and present in ways that require real behavioral adjustments. The average temperature in July hovers around 106 degrees, and individual days, or clusters of them, reach 110 degrees or higher. June is statistically the hottest month of the year.
The good news is that hundreds of thousands of people move to Arizona every year and thrive here through summer and beyond. You adapt faster than you think you will. You develop rhythms and routines that make it manageable. And the eight months of extraordinary weather that bookend the summer make every single person who lives here feel like the trade was worth it. This guide gives you everything you need to get through your first summer with your health, your sanity, and your enthusiasm for Arizona intact.
First Understand What You're Actually Dealing With
Before we get into tips and tactics, let's be clear about what Arizona summer heat actually is, because understanding it changes how you approach it.
Phoenix summer heat is extreme dry heat with very low humidity, during peak summer, humidity can drop to 2% to 10%, which is genuinely parching. That dryness means sweat evaporates almost instantly from your skin, which creates two problems. First, your body's cooling system works overtime and you dehydrate faster than you can feel it happening. Second, because you're not visibly sweating the way you would in humid heat, your body doesn't give you the same warning signals. You can feel relatively fine and be significantly dehydrated at the same time.
The path to heat stroke follows a fairly predictable series of steps: thirst signals that you're already starting to get dehydrated, followed by heavy sweating, weakness, dizziness, and eventually heat exhaustion or heat stroke if ignored. Heat stroke is a medical emergency. Every summer, around 2,000 people end up in emergency rooms and approximately 100 die from heat related illness in Arizona, nearly all of them people who underestimated the heat or didn't take precautions.
That's not meant to frighten you. It's meant to make sure you take this seriously from day one, because the residents who get into trouble are almost always the ones who treated Phoenix summer like a slightly hotter version of somewhere they'd been before.
Hydration More Than You Think, Earlier Than You Think
In Phoenix summer, consider a bottle of water your most important fashion accessory. This is not an exaggeration. Hydration in Arizona summer is not about drinking water when you're thirsty, by the time you feel thirsty, you're already dehydrated. The practice is proactive, consistent hydration throughout the entire day, whether you feel like you need it or not.
The standard advice of eight cups of water a day is wildly insufficient for outdoor Arizona summer activity. If you're outside in the Phoenix sun, you need considerably more. A good rule of thumb used by experienced locals: drink water before you go outside, bring more than you think you'll need, and drink on a schedule rather than waiting for thirst to prompt you.
Electrolytes matter too, especially if you're active. Plain water doesn't replace the sodium, potassium, and magnesium you lose through sweat, and drinking large amounts of water without electrolyte replacement can actually create problems. Sports drinks, electrolyte tablets, or coconut water are tools experienced Arizona residents use during prolonged outdoor activity.
Avoid sugary drinks, alcohol, and caffeine during hot outdoor periods, all three accelerate dehydration. Save those for air conditioned indoor settings. And if you're on any medications, check with your healthcare provider about how they interact with heat and hydration, as some common medications increase heat sensitivity significantly.
Rethink Your Schedule The Arizona Summer Rhythm
The single biggest adjustment new Arizona residents make is shifting their entire daily schedule to work around the heat rather than against it. This sounds like a big change, and it is at first, but within a few weeks it becomes completely natural, and most people find they actually love the rhythm.
The rule is simple: outdoor physical activity happens before 9 AM or after 7 PM from mid June through mid September. Morning is everything. Sunrise hikes, 6 AM trail runs, early morning dog walks, outdoor yoga at dawn, Arizona's outdoor culture is aggressively morning focused during summer for exactly this reason. The desert at 6 AM on a summer morning is genuinely beautiful, the air is as cool as it's going to get, and you get the satisfaction of outdoor activity done before the rest of the country has had their first cup of coffee.
Midday is for air conditioned life. Work, errands, restaurants, shopping, indoor recreation, all of it happens during the hottest hours of the day. In Arizona, just about everything is air conditioned, your home, car, restaurants, shops, and even community centers. Many active adult communities offer indoor walking tracks, so staying active doesn't mean braving the sun. The infrastructure of Arizona life is built around this reality. You will not struggle to find comfortable, air conditioned places to spend the middle of the day.
Evenings come alive after 7 PM. Outdoor dining, neighborhood walks, community events, backyard pool time, Arizona's evening culture during summer is genuinely wonderful. Sunset in Phoenix during monsoon season is one of the most spectacular things you'll see anywhere in the country, and the relief of cooling evening air after a hot day has a quality that's almost indescribably pleasant once you've lived it.
Your Car Is a Safety Issue, Not Just a Comfort Issue
This is one of the most important practical lessons for new Arizona residents, and it's one that people from other states consistently underestimate until they experience it firsthand.
A car parked in direct Arizona summer sun can reach interior temperatures of 150 to 170 degrees Fahrenheit within minutes. Steering wheels and seatbelt buckles become hot enough to cause burns on contact. Car seats for children and pets can reach temperatures that are dangerous within the time it takes to run a quick errand.
Practical habits that every experienced Arizona resident develops: park in shade whenever possible, shade parking is genuinely valuable real estate in Arizona and worth a longer walk. Use a windshield sunshade every single time you park, without exception. Crack windows when safe to do so. Let your car cool for a minute or two before gripping the steering wheel, or use a cloth to handle it until the A C kicks in. Keep oven mitts in the glove box for seatbelt buckles. And never, under any circumstances, leave children or pets in a parked car, even with windows cracked, even for two minutes.
The window tinting culture in Arizona is real and functional. Most residents tint their car windows to the legal limit, and for good reason, tinted windows dramatically reduce interior heat buildup and UV exposure during a long summer of driving.
Your Home Preparing for the Season
If you're in a new Arizona home heading into your first summer, a few home specific preparations will make a significant difference in your comfort and your electric bill.
Your HVAC system is the most important piece of equipment in your home from June through September. Have it professionally serviced before the summer begins, clean filters, check refrigerant levels, inspect the system. An HVAC failure in July is a genuine emergency in Phoenix, not a mere inconvenience. Having your system inspected in May gives you time to address any issues before peak demand, and also gives you peace of mind through the hottest months.
Programmable or smart thermostats are standard in Arizona because managing your A C schedule strategically makes a real difference on your electric bill. Most experienced Arizona residents pre cool their homes to the mid 70s before the hottest part of the day, then let the temperature rise slightly during peak utility rate hours, typically 3 PM to 8 PM on most APS and SRP plans, then cool again in the evening. Understanding your utility provider's rate schedule and adjusting your thermostat accordingly can save meaningful money over a summer.
Budget realistically for summer electricity. For a typical 2,000 square foot Phoenix home, summer electric bills run $250 to $400 per month or more depending on your thermostat settings, home insulation quality, and window exposure. If you're in a larger home or have a pool with an electric pump, budget higher. This is not a surprise expense if you plan for it, but it catches people off guard when they don't.
Outdoor furniture, plants, and yard maintenance all shift seasonally. Most desert landscaping is adapted to summer heat and requires minimal water. Non native plants may need more frequent watering during extreme heat. Outdoor furniture should be stored or covered during peak summer to prevent fading and material degradation from intense UV exposure. Many residents store outdoor cushions inside during the hottest months.
Sun Protection Building New Daily Habits
Arizona's desert sun is more intense than almost anywhere else in the continental United States, and UV exposure accumulates whether or not you feel like you're getting burned. Building serious sun protection habits is one of the most important long term health investments you can make as a new Arizona resident.
Regularly apply sunscreen to exposed skin, wear light colored clothing and wide brimmed hats, and take frequent breaks from the sun during outdoor activity. These are not suggestions, they are the baseline habits of every long term Arizona resident who takes their skin health seriously.
SPF 50 or higher, broad spectrum sunscreen applied before going outside, not when you arrive at your destination, is the standard. Reapply every two hours if you're outdoors, and immediately after swimming. UV protective clothing, particularly UPF rated shirts and hats with full brims, is widely available and genuinely effective. Many Arizona residents wear lightweight long sleeves outdoors specifically for UV protection, which sounds counterintuitive but keeps you cooler and better protected than bare arms in direct sun.
Polarized sunglasses are essential. Arizona's sun intensity and reflective desert surfaces create an eye strain and UV exposure risk that requires proper lens protection, not fashion sunglasses.
Indoor Activities Your Summer Social Life
One of the things that surprises new residents most is how vibrant and active summer social life in Phoenix actually is, it just moves indoors and into the early morning and evening hours.
Indoor recreation options in the Phoenix metro are extensive. Top Golf and Bowlero are enormously popular summer destinations. Escape rooms, trampoline parks, indoor climbing gyms, bowling alleys, movie theaters, art classes, cooking classes, and casino entertainment all thrive during Phoenix summer precisely because residents are actively seeking air conditioned activities. The Arizona Science Center, Phoenix Art Museum, Musical Instrument Museum, and Heard Museum all offer excellent indoor experiences.
Resort pool access is a specifically Arizona summer pleasure that most people don't know about until they live here. Lots of the resorts in and around Scottsdale are looking for ways to bring in locals during the summer, so it's not unheard of to get some really good deals on a staycation right here in the Valley of the Sun, usually for less than $100 a night, you can stay at an amazing resort and get access to the pools and amenities. Day passes to resort pools are also commonly available in summer, giving residents access to stunning pool environments at deeply discounted rates compared to peak season.
Golf courses in greater Phoenix also lower their prices in summer. World class courses that charge premium rates in the winter and spring offer dramatically reduced green fees from June through September. For golfers, this is one of the genuine financial pleasures of Arizona summer, just budget time for early morning rounds before the heat peaks.
Getting Out of Town Your Summer Escape Toolkit
Every longtime Arizona resident develops what locals call their summer escape plan, places within driving distance where temperatures are meaningfully cooler and outdoor life can continue normally.
Flagstaff is the classic Phoenix summer escape. Two hours north of Phoenix at 7,000 feet elevation, Flagstaff's summer high temperatures typically reach the low to mid 80s, an almost incomprehensible contrast to the Valley floor. Hiking, camping, fishing, mountain biking, and simply sitting outside on a restaurant patio are all available in Flagstaff during the months when they're impractical in Phoenix. Weekend trips to Flagstaff are a deeply ingrained part of Arizona family culture.
Prescott, at 5,000 feet elevation and 90 minutes from Phoenix, offers similar relief with a small town charm and walkable downtown that makes it a wonderful overnight or weekend destination. Sedona, at 4,500 feet, is beautiful in summer and significantly cooler than the Valley, though it draws summer tourists, so plan accordingly.
Salt River Tubing just outside Phoenix is a great way to stay cool, for around $20, you can rent a tube and spend three hours on a lazy river with beautiful scenery. It's an Arizona summer tradition that gets packed on weekends and is genuinely one of the best summertime activities in the region.
Arizona has six national forests, 31 state parks, and more than 12 million acres of public land managed by the Bureau of Land Management, much of it at higher elevations where summer temperatures are far more moderate. Learning which outdoor destinations are accessible within two to three hours of your home and planning monthly getaways through the summer gives you something to look forward to and breaks up what can otherwise feel like a long stretch of staying indoors.
The Monsoon Your Summer Reward
Here is the part nobody tells newcomers about, and it is genuinely wonderful: Arizona's monsoon season, which runs roughly from late June through September, is spectacular.
Monsoons bring dramatic afternoon and evening thunderstorms that roll in from the south, drop intense rainfall, and produce some of the most visually extraordinary weather events you'll see anywhere in the country. Lightning storms that light up the desert sky at night. The smell of desert rain on hot pavement, a scent so distinctive and beloved that it has a name, petrichor. Double rainbows over the Superstition Mountains. The desert turning green practically overnight as plants respond to the moisture. Saguaro cactus silhouetted against purple storm clouds at sunset.
Haboobs, massive dust storms that occasionally precede monsoon fronts, are jarring the first time you see one. A wall of dust 3,000 feet high moving toward you across the desert is an arresting sight. Standard practice is to pull over and wait it out if you're driving, keep windows and doors closed at home, and run air purifiers if you have them. They pass relatively quickly and are more dramatic looking than dangerous in most circumstances.
The practical side of monsoon prep: make sure your outdoor furniture is secured or stored, your drainage is clear, and your home's weatherstripping is intact. Flash flooding is a real concern in low lying areas and washes, never drive through flooded roadways, as Arizona's Stupid Motorist Law makes drivers financially liable for emergency rescue costs if they drive around barriers into flooded areas.
The monsoon season is when many longtime Arizona residents say they fall most in love with the state. The combination of dramatic weather, green desert, cool evening storms, and that extraordinary light that comes after a desert rain is unlike anything most people have experienced before.
The Mental Game Perspective Matters
Your mindset going into your first Arizona summer matters as much as your preparation. The residents who struggle most are the ones who spend the summer waiting for it to be over and measuring each day against California or wherever they came from. The ones who thrive are the ones who embrace the season on its own terms.
Think of Arizona's summer heat the same way Seattle handles constant rain or Chicago deals with snowstorms, you adapt your habits and spend more time indoors. Locals just learn to work with it, not against it.
One unexpected perspective shift that helps: summer means fewer seasonal visitors, shorter wait times, and less crowded spaces. Restaurants that have hour long waits in January are walk in friendly in July. Hiking trails that are packed in the spring are yours alone at 6 AM in August. Scottsdale resort pools that require reservations months in advance in February are accessible at day pass prices in summer. There are real pleasures to the off season that locals genuinely appreciate.
Your body also acclimates to the heat faster than you expect. Most new residents report that by their second or third summer, the heat that felt overwhelming in year one feels genuinely manageable, not comfortable in the way that 75 degrees is comfortable, but familiar and workable in a way that stops feeling like a survival challenge and starts feeling like just the season you live in.
Frequently Asked Questions Arizona Summer Survival
How hot does Phoenix actually get in summer?
The average July high is approximately 106 degrees Fahrenheit. Days of 110 degrees or higher occur regularly throughout June, July, and August. The record high for Phoenix is 122 degrees, set in June 1990 and never matched since.
When does Arizona summer start and end?
Summer heat in Phoenix typically begins in earnest in mid May and peaks from mid June through mid August. Temperatures begin to moderate meaningfully in late September, with October bringing weather that most people describe as perfect.
Is dry heat really better than humid heat?
In some ways yes, you don't feel as instantly overwhelmed as you do in high humidity heat, and sweating is more effective. But the dryness creates rapid dehydration that many people don't feel coming. Dry heat is different, not necessarily easier.
What temperature does it cool down to at night in Phoenix summer?
Phoenix summer nights stay warm, overnight lows in July typically run 85 to 90 degrees Fahrenheit. The air does cool noticeably from peak daytime temperatures, but Phoenix summer nights are not cool nights. This is part of what makes the heat so cumulative over the summer months.
Can you exercise outdoors in Phoenix summer?
Yes, but only during the early morning hours, before 9 AM is the standard guideline. Trail closures are enforced on major Phoenix hiking trails during Extreme Heat Warnings, typically between 8 AM and 5 PM. Water, electrolytes, sun protection, and knowing your limits are essential.
When does monsoon season happen in Arizona?
Arizona's monsoon season officially runs from June 15 through September 30, with the most active storm period typically occurring in July and August. Afternoon and evening thunderstorms are common during this period, often bringing dramatic lightning, brief intense rainfall, and occasional dust storms.
You're Going to Love It Here
I say this to every client who asks me about the summer with a mix of curiosity and dread: give it one full year. Survive your first summer, experience your first Arizona fall arriving in October like a gift, spend January eating lunch outside in a t shirt, hike in February wildflowers, and watch the desert turn pink and gold in the spring sunset. By the time summer rolls around again, you'll have the rhythms down, you'll know your escape spots, you'll have your morning hike schedule sorted, and you'll be the one telling newcomers "the heat is different, you'll need to adjust" with a smile, because you'll know exactly how good the other side of it is.
Let's find the place where your family puts down roots.
Alejandra Paladino REALTOR®
Call or Text: 480.382.0519
Email Me At: alejandra@azalejandra.com
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