As of Saturday, 29 November 2025, the Met Office reports a sweeping band of heavy rain and gusty winds sweeping across London and much of South‑East England -- threatening to turn what many planned as a weekend getaway into a soggy gamble. From central London to coastal favourites like Brighton & Hove, Portsmouth, Southampton and surrounding Kent, Surrey and coastal districts, travellers are being urged to brace for travel disruption, wet roads, and possible flooding.
The Met Office's latest forecast shows London enduring light rain at around 11 °C (feels like 9 °C), with rain chances ≥ 95% through the late morning. Although rainfall is expected to ease by afternoon, scattered showers may return later in the evening. Hourly data suggests rain probability dropping to 50% by noon, falling further to 20% by early afternoon, and remaining below 10% for much of the evening -- though isolated pockets of rain remain possible.
This rainfall is part of a larger weather system affecting the South‑East and southern England, prompting Yellow‑level severe weather warnings for heavy rain. The warnings signal a medium-level disruption risk: rain heavy enough to cause surface water flooding, unsafe roads, and potential impacts on travel and public transport.
The alert covers London and a broad stretch of South‑East England: Brighton & Hove, Kent, Surrey, Portsmouth, Southampton, and surrounding coastal and low‑lying regions. Even areas of higher ground, such as the downs, face the possibility of heavier rainfall and localised inundation.
For travellers, weekend escape plans -- whether a train ride from London to the coast, a ferry to the Isle of Wight, a seaside drive, or a countryside retreat -- are now fraught with uncertainty. Public‑transport services and road links are at risk of delays or cancellation, while coastal journeys may be complicated by spray, surface water and reduced visibility.
The first Yellow Warning began early on Saturday, 29 November 2025, and remains in force through the weekend, with Saturday expected to bring around 5 mm of rain across much of the region. Sunday may offer a respite, with drier skies expected and only a low chance (≈ 20 %) of rain by late evening.
But the respite is expected to be brief. Another round of heavy rain is forecast from Monday evening (1 December) through Tuesday (2 December), with significantly larger rainfall totals -- 20-30 mm widely, and 50-60 mm possible over higher ground such as the downs. Coastal areas may also face strong, possibly gale‑force winds.
The current alert stems from a low‑pressure system moving in from the Atlantic, bringing moist, rain‑laden air to southern England. As this air collides with cooler air masses over the region, it triggers persistent rainfall, with the risk of surface‑water flooding and spray on roads -- especially when combined with strong winds along coastal zones.
Although this is not a record‑breaking storm like earlier this month (when the region faced more severe warnings), the combination of rain, wind, and repeat deluges over successive days increases risk to travel infrastructure and daily mobility.
Under a Yellow warning, the Met Office advises people to "be aware" -- meaning plan ahead and consider how travel, commuting, or leisure plans might be impacted. Disruptions can be variable: some may not be affected at all; others might see cancellations, delay or local flooding depending on their exact location.
Travel‑ready advice applicable now:
This forecast underscores a volatile few days ahead for both commuters and holiday‑makers -- with two distinct wet spells bookending what many hoped would be a calm weekend and early week.
While the current warnings are "just" Yellow (the lowest of the three-tier warnings used by the Met Office), they remain significant. The advice is not to panic, but to stay alert -- especially for travellers planning to head toward coastal regions, countryside retreats or through flood‑prone zones. Yellow alerts are often underestimated, but even "low‑level" disruption can cause enough chaos to derail weekend getaways, commuting routines and short breaks.
For residents and travellers alike, the next 48-72 hours will demand flexibility and attentiveness: a seemingly innocent road trip to the coast could turn into a soggy delay, a train ride might be postponed -- or a ferry may not sail at all.
If you have plans this weekend or early next week to travel from London outward -- whether to Portsmouth, Brighton, Southampton, the Isle of Wight, Kent or any South‑East region -- now is a good time to reassess. Check forecasts and transport updates, stay alert for flood warnings, and consider postponing non‑essential travel. For essential journeys, leave early, drive carefully, and build in extra time.
In the face of rain, wind, flood risk and travel disruption, it might be best to press pause on spontaneous coastal adventures -- at least until the skies clear and the roads dry.