New York Mosquito Forecast
New York sees high mosquito pressure, shaped by a temperate, humid, high-rainfall climate and about 49" of rain a year. Activity builds through the warm months and runs from May through September.
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When is mosquito season in New York?
New York's mosquito season runs from May through September. Activity ramps up once overnight lows hold above about 50°F, and surges in the two to three days after rain, when fresh standing water triggers a new hatch. Hot, dry stretches briefly knock numbers back before the next rain refills the breeding sites.
Where are mosquitoes worst in New York?
Within New York, the most consistent pressure tends to land around New York City, Brooklyn, and Queens. Urban heat plus abundant standing water — storm drains, retention ponds, backyards — concentrates activity around these metros. Anywhere near rivers, marshes, lakes, or recent flooding will read higher than the surrounding area — exactly the kind of local detail the live map above is built to show.
How the New York forecast works
MosquitoCast estimates New York's mosquito activity from live weather — temperature, humidity, wind, and recent rainfall — layered on the area's long-term rainfall climate, elevation, and terrain, and refreshed every day from NOAA's forecast data. It's the same model nationwide, so the reading for New York is directly comparable to anywhere else in the country.