A statistical fluke is keeping New York soaked every weekend
It’s June, and it’s hard to find anyone in New York State who hasn’t noticed the frustrating pattern: rain, every single weekend. From the Adirondacks to Albany and Syracuse, skies continue to open up just as the weekend begins. So, what’s really going on?
The numbers are clear: rainy weekends everywhere
According to data from the New York State Weather Risk Communication Center at the University at Albany, cities like Saranac Lake have recorded just 27 dry days so far this year. Albany has only seen 42 days without precipitation. In many parts of the state, less than half of 2025 has been dry.
“When we looked into the last sunny Saturday in Albany,” said Alison Finch, a meteorologist at the center, “we uncovered an astonishing streak of back-to-back rainy weekends.”
An unlucky atmospheric alignment
But the cause isn’t some rare weather anomaly or looming climate crisis. According to meteorologist Cory Smith, who spoke with Spectrum News 1, it’s mostly about bad timing — regular weather systems are simply falling on weekends right now.
Typical frontal boundaries and storm tracks moving across the Northeast U.S. are aligning in such a way that they’re more likely to bring rain on Saturdays and Sundays, while leaving weekdays relatively dry.
Albany, Syracuse and the vanishing dry weekends
In places like Albany, where winter left already saturated ground, any additional storm system only compounds the moisture, creating standing water and a persistent gray sky. The soil hasn’t had time to dry between one round of precipitation and the next.
No curse, just meteorology
Even though it might feel like some kind of cruel pattern or cosmic joke, experts confirm: it’s just statistics and bad luck. No deeper climatic mechanism is sabotaging New York’s weekends — at least, not yet.


