Weather apps are a dime-a-dozen on Android, and while most of them get the basics right, not all of them are suited for everyone. With extreme winter weather raging across larges parts of the country, it is imperative that people keep an eye on any developing weather situation. While television and radio stations generally do a good job of keeping their viewers and listeners up-to-date about the latest weather, having a dedicated app that could offer hour-by-hour forecasts on-demand is priceless.

Both Android and iOS have a ton of high-quality weather apps, and most of them are available on both platforms. There are, however, some exceptions, like Dark Sky, which was available on both Android and iOS until about a year and a half ago when Apple acquired it and promptly shut down the Android version. However, there are still plenty of options available on Android, including some of the best in the business.

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Probably the most popular weather app on Android is AccuWeather, which has more than 100 million downloads on the Google Play Store. It offers not just accurate predictions, but also has an intuitive user interface, making it almost the default go-to weather app for most people. It has also been awarded by the World Meteorological Organization, which should be the stamp of assurance that anyone needs as to the app’s reliability and accuracy. For enthusiasts and serious meteorologists, it also offers a radar view for temperature, tropical storms, temperature contour, satellite cloud cover, and precipitation. It also has a dedicated winter weather forecast with advanced warnings of snowfall probabilities and accumulation.

Other Notable Weather Apps On Android

Weather Underground is another standout among all the available weather apps on Android. Like AccuWeather, Weather Underground also shows detailed info about temperature, precipitation, atmospheric pressure, and wind directions, although the interface is relatively cluttered and is aimed more at advanced users rather than general users. However, it makes up for the relatively non-intuitive UI by offering a ton of data displayed as a series of charts, graphs, and images. The app is also customizable, allowing users to add, remove or change any feature to suit their needs. Crowd-sourced information is a big part of Weather Underground, and users can even register their own weather stations to work with the platform.

While AccuWeather and Weather Underground are clearly two of the best weather apps on Android, there are a ton of other really good ones that users can opt for. Chief among them are 1Weather and WeatherBug, both of which offer a ton of features for both regular folks and power users. WeatherBug offers an hour-by-hour snowfall prediction for much of the U.S., along with local radar, future radar, air quality, lightning, precipitation, local temperature, wind chill, road forecast, heat index, pollen count, and more, making it one of the best and most comprehensive apps in its category. As for 1Weather, it offers hurricane alerts, snowstorm tracker, rain forecasts, current temperature, a 10-day forecast, over 25 live radar maps, and some additional bells and whistles. Ultimately, if you pick any of these apps you’re going to have more weather info than you know what to do with, and it’s really a matter of which user interface catches your eye.

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Source: AccuWeather, Weather Underground, WeatherBug, 1Weather

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