Moving from Los Angeles to Phoenix
A climate comparison of two homes: California to Arizona. The dates below come from the nearest official weather station to each place.
Climate Match
Your last spring frost moves from December 31 to January 8, 357 days earlier.
Los Angeles, CA to Phoenix, AZ
The full comparison
| Measure | From | To | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Last spring frost | December 31 | January 8 | 357 days earlier |
| Warmest month | 26C in August | 34C in July | 8C hotter |
| Frost-free season | 365 days | 354 days | 11 days shorter |
| Coldest month | 13C in December | 12C in December | 2C colder |
Moving from Los Angeles to Phoenix reshapes the home year. Winters get 2C colder. Summers get 8C hotter. Your growing season is 11 days shorter. Plan on a new rhythm for the house and garden.
What changes about the house
- Heating: expect a longer or deeper heating season. Service the furnace or boiler before the first cold snap, and budget for higher heating bills.
- Cooling: hotter peaks make air conditioning or shading more important. Check attic insulation and window sealing so the house does not trap heat.
- Garden: a longer frost-free season opens more crop choices and succession sowings. Raised beds warm earlier in spring.
- Garden: a shorter season favors transplants, short-season varieties, and cold frames. Wait for soil to warm before direct sowing.
Season by season
Spring starts earlier
Your last spring frost moves from December 31 to January 8, 357 days earlier. Start planting and outdoor prep sooner.
Summers run hotter
The warmest month goes from 26C in August to 34C in July. Air conditioning, shading, and cooling-load planning matter more.
Winters turn harsher
Winter coldest month goes from 13C in December to 12C in December. Budget for more heating, snow removal, and ice-dam prevention.
Tools for both places
Moving from Los Angeles to Phoenix, answered
What is the biggest climate change from Los Angeles to Phoenix?
Your last spring frost moves from December 31 to January 8, 357 days earlier. That is the largest shift in the 30-year climate record.
How are these numbers computed?
From official 30-year climate normals at the nearest station to each place: Van Nuys Ap near Los Angeles and Phoenix Deer Valley Muni Ap near Phoenix. They are planning averages, not forecasts; local microclimates can run a week or two off the station record.
Does the comparison work in reverse?
Yes. Open the comparison tool and swap the two places; the deltas reverse direction but the match score stays the same.
Method and sources
Temperatures and frost dates are from the 30-year climate normals at Van Nuys Ap (near Los Angeles, CA) and Phoenix Deer Valley Muni Ap (near Phoenix, AZ). Canadian data is from Environment and Climate Change Canada; United States data is from NOAA NCEI. These are planning averages, not forecasts. See the methodology page for the full calculation.