Planning
When to visit California
California has no single season because it has no single climate. The coast can be foggy in early summer while the desert bakes and the Sierra holds snow, so the best time depends entirely on which zone you are aiming for — beach town, wine country, mountain lake, or desert resort.
The coast and its early-summer fog
The California coast is mild year-round but not always sunny. Late spring and early summer bring the marine-layer fog locals call May Gray and June Gloom, when mornings at beaches from La Jolla to Santa Monica and up to Mendocino can be overcast until midday. Clearer, warmer coastal weather often peaks in late summer and early fall (September–October).
Big Sur and the North Coast are wettest from late fall through early spring, which feeds the waterfalls but also raises the risk of Highway 1 slides and closures. Whale-watching and wildflowers have their own windows — gray whales migrate past the coast in winter and spring.
Wine country, the desert, and the mountains
Napa and Sonoma are busiest and most expensive during the fall harvest, or crush (roughly September–October), when the vineyards are active and the weather is warm; late spring is a quieter, greener alternative. The Palm Springs desert flips the calendar: winter and spring are the prime season with warm, dry days, while summer regularly exceeds 100°F (38°C) and many activities shift to early morning.
Lake Tahoe is a true two-season destination — winter for skiing at Heavenly and other resorts, and summer for the lake, Emerald Bay, and hiking. Spring and late fall are shoulder seasons when some lifts and lake services close but crowds and prices ease.
Wildfire season and smoke
California's wildfire risk is highest in the dry months of late summer through fall, and even distant fires can push smoke into wine country, the Sierra, and the coast, affecting air quality and visibility. This does not mean avoiding the fall — often the best weather of the year — but it does mean building in flexibility.
Before and during a fall trip, check the AirNow air-quality index and CAL FIRE incident updates, and keep an eye on Caltrans for any highway impacts. Travel insurance and refundable bookings are worth considering for peak fire-season trips.
Sources
Reviewed source trail
- National Weather Service — California forecasts — checked 2026-07-12
- AirNow — air quality index — checked 2026-07-12
- CAL FIRE — current incidents — checked 2026-07-12
- Visit California — seasonal travel — checked 2026-07-12