Weather

Los Angeles Weather Brief for 26 June-3 July: Morning Clouds, Afternoon Sun and Microclimate Planning

A stable early-summer pattern keeps Los Angeles mostly in the 70s, but marine-layer timing still matters for commuters, beaches and outdoor work.

By Mateo Reyes · June 26, 2026
Email Reporter
Los Angeles Weather Brief for 26 June-3 July: Morning Clouds, Afternoon Sun and Microclimate Planning
CGN News / Cook Global News Network / CGN Weather / All Rights Reserved

LOS ANGELES | Los Angeles gets a classic early-summer pattern from 26 June through 3 July: morning clouds, afternoon clearing and a steady run of pleasant but still variable microclimate days.

The city forecast keeps highs mostly in the mid-70s, with overnight lows in the low-to-mid 60s. Friday is expected to start cloudy before sunshine returns. Saturday again brings low clouds giving way to sun. Sunday and Monday continue the clouds-to-sun pattern, while Tuesday through Friday trend sunnier and pleasantly cool by Los Angeles standards.

Day-by-day outlook

Friday: 77°F high, 62°F low, clouds giving way to sun. Saturday: 77°F high, 63°F low, low clouds giving way to sunshine. Sunday: 76°F high, 60°F low, clouds yielding to sun. Monday: 76°F high, 61°F low, clouds yielding to sun. Tuesday: 76°F high, 62°F low, mostly sunny and pleasant. Wednesday: 74°F high, 61°F low, mostly sunny and pleasantly cool. Thursday: 74°F high, 62°F low, plenty of sunshine. Friday, 3 July: 77°F high, 64°F low, plenty of sunshine.

The main forecast issue is not severe weather; it is planning across microclimates. Beach, Valley, downtown, airport and foothill conditions can feel different even when the citywide headline looks calm. Morning marine layer timing may affect commuters, outdoor workers, filming schedules and beach plans.

This weather brief does not replace official alerts. Readers should check the National Weather Service for marine statements, heat advisories, wildfire-weather products or air-quality coordination before travel or outdoor work.

Additional Reporting By: National Weather Service Los Angeles/Oxnard; NOAA.

What This Means

What This Means: The forecast looks calm, but Los Angeles still needs neighborhood-specific planning because marine layer, coastal cooling and inland warming can change daily decisions.

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