Maharashtra Temperature May 2026: Why Toranmal Hill Stattion (14°C) Is the Coolest Escape from the Heatwave
By Imran Mulla | Founder, TravelJunctions.in | 17 Years in the Travel Industry Let me be straight with you. The Maharashtra temperature in May 2026 is brutal. I have been running tours across this state for 17 years, and this year’s heat is one of the worst I’ve seen. Nagpur is hitting 43–45°C. Pune crossed 38°C earlier this week. Mumbai feels like a pressure cooker with no lid. If you are sitting in one of these cities right now — sweating, irritable, desperately scrolling for somewhere to breathe — I have exactly the answer you need. Toranmal Hill Station. It’s sitting at 14°C as you read this. And most people have no idea it even exists. What Is the Current Maharashtra Temperature in May 2026? Direct Answer: In May 2026, Maharashtra is experiencing above-normal temperatures across most of the state. Vidarbha and Marathwada are seeing 43–45°C, Pune hovers around 37–40°C, and Mumbai is battling suffocating heat and humidity. The IMD has confirmed above-normal heatwave days for Maharashtra this month. Maharashtra in May is always hot — that’s nothing new. But May 2026 is tracking differently. The India Meteorological Department (IMD) in its monthly outlook confirmed that above-normal heatwave days are likely over parts of Gujarat and Maharashtra during this period. Minimum temperatures too are expected to stay above normal across most of the state — meaning even the nights are not giving any relief. Here’s a quick snapshot of what’s happening right now across the state: City / Region Day Temperature (May 2026) Night Temperature Humidity Nagpur 43–45°C 28–30°C Moderate Pune 37–40°C 22–25°C Low–Moderate Mumbai 33–36°C 26–28°C Very High Nashik 36–39°C 22–24°C Low Aurangabad 40–42°C 26–28°C Low Toranmal 14–28°C 13–16°C Low–Comfortable That last row is not a typo. Toranmal is cooler than your AC room. Why Is Maharashtra Experiencing Extreme Heat in May 2026? Direct Answer: Maharashtra’s extreme heat in May 2026 is driven by evolving El Niño-like conditions over the equatorial Pacific, above-normal minimum temperatures nationwide, and the typical pre-monsoon dry air mass that blankets interior Maharashtra. IMD has officially flagged above-normal heatwave risk for the state. The science here is straightforward. The IMD’s May 2026 forecast points to ENSO-neutral conditions shifting toward El Niño, which suppresses rainfall and allows temperatures to climb faster and stay higher. When that happens, interior Maharashtra — particularly Vidarbha and Marathwada — gets absolutely cooked. The dry, flat terrain has no forest cover to moderate temperatures. The sun hits the ground directly, and the heat bounces back up. Three big reasons it feels worse this year: Which Cities Are the Hottest in Maharashtra Right Now? Direct Answer: As of May 2026, Nagpur is the hottest city in Maharashtra at 43–45°C, followed by Aurangabad and Nanded at 40–42°C. Pune is crossing 38–40°C consistently. Mumbai may feel more tolerable temperature-wise, but extreme humidity makes it feel like 40°C or more. From my experience running tours across Maharashtra, here’s the ground truth — and it’s worse than the numbers suggest: Nagpur (43–45°C): Known as the “Orange City” but in May it earns a different nickname. Heat here is dry but intense. Standing outside between 11 AM and 5 PM is genuinely dangerous. I never schedule stops in Nagpur in May. Pune (37–40°C): Pune used to pride itself on being cooler than Mumbai. That advantage has been shrinking every year. In early May 2026, forecasts show 38.4°C — above its historical average. If you’re in Pune, you know what I mean. Mumbai (33–36°C + High Humidity): The number looks smaller, but the humidity makes it feel like a sauna that you can’t leave. The IMD flagged hot and humid weather conditions for Konkan through the first week of May. Walking outside at noon in Mumbai in May is not advisable for anyone above 50. Which Is the Coolest Place in Maharashtra Right Now? (Toranmal Explained) Direct Answer: Toranmal is the coolest place in Maharashtra in May 2026, recording minimum temperatures of around 14°C and maximum temperatures of 28°C. It sits at approximately 1,150 meters above sea level in the Satpura Range of Nandurbar district — far from the crowds of Lonavala and Mahabaleshwar. I’ve taken groups to Toranmal twice in the last three years, and both times the reaction was the same: “Why did nobody tell us about this place?” Toranmal is tucked away in the Satpura Range in Nandurbar district, right near the Maharashtra–Madhya Pradesh border. While the rest of the state is melting, Toranmal sits at roughly 1,150 metres above sea level with thick forest cover on all sides. In May 2026, it is recording lows of 14°C and highs of around 28°C — making it the single coolest destination in all of Maharashtra during this heatwave. And here’s the best part: almost nobody goes there in May. No traffic jams on the ghat. No overpriced hotels. No queues at restaurants. Just cool air, green hills, and actual peace. Why Is Toranmal Hill Station So Cool Even in Peak Summer? Direct Answer: Toranmal stays cool in summer because of its elevation of approximately 1,150 metres in the Satpura Range, its dense forest cover that keeps the plateau shaded, and its unusual microclimate that actually receives more rainfall in summer than during the monsoon months. These factors together keep temperatures 15–20°C cooler than Nagpur or Pune. Three things make Toranmal climatically special: 1. Elevation: At ~1,150 metres, it is Maharashtra’s second highest and second coldest hill station. Every 100 metres of gain drops temperatures by about 0.65°C. Do the math — that’s roughly a 7–10°C natural drop compared to the plains below. 2. Plateau + Forest Shield: Toranmal sits on a natural plateau shaped almost like a soccer field — a geographical quirk that traps cool air and moisture. Dense Satpura forests surround it on all sides, blocking direct sunlight and acting as a natural air-conditioner. 3. Unusual Climate Pattern: This is the part that surprises most travelers. Toranmal actually receives more rainfall during summer than during the monsoon months — a rare Koppen-classified microclimate.
