People ask me when to visit Palm Springs like there's one correct answer. There isn't. I've stayed there in every season over the past few years, and each one has something real going for it, including July, which I know sounds insane. The answer depends on what you want out of the trip.
Here's the honest version.
| Peak Season | January–April (Modernism Week, Coachella, BNP Paribas) |
|---|---|
| Shoulder Season | October–November, May (warm but not brutal) |
| Off-Season | June–September (100°F+, but cheap rates and pool weather) |
| Busiest Weekends | Coachella (April), Stagecoach (April), Splash House (June, August) |
| Closest Property | The Sundune, Palm Springs |
Desert sunsets don't require a specific season to be good. This is late October, which is as close to perfect as Palm Springs gets.
The Short Answer
If you want the best possible combination of weather, events, and things to do, come in February or March. The highs are in the low-to-mid 70s, nights are cool, and the city is alive. It's also peak season, which means prices are high and you'll want to book well in advance.
If you want the best prices, come in June or July. You'll need to be strategic about the heat, but the savings are real and the pools are empty.
Now the longer version.
Winter: December to February
Temperatures: 65-75°F days, 45-55°F nights Crowds: Moderate in December, building through February Events: Desert Modernism events, film festival build-up, holiday closures in December
December is a mixed bag. Some restaurants and shops cut their hours around the holidays, and a lot of locals take the week between Christmas and New Year off. The weather is mild, the crowds haven't peaked yet, and rates are reasonable. It's the quiet version of Palm Springs, which some people prefer.
January and February are when the city starts to wake up. The Palm Springs International Film Festival runs in early January and brings a real energy to Downtown. By February, the BNP Paribas Open tennis tournament in nearby Indian Wells is approaching, and hotel prices reflect it.
If hiking is part of your plan, winter is ideal. The trails are cool enough for long days, and the lower desert has intermittent wildflowers after rain years.
Winter nights in the desert are cold enough to need a jacket and clear enough for serious moonrise watching.
Spring: March to May
Temperatures: 75-95°F days, 55-65°F nights Crowds: Peak in March-April, thinning in May Events: BNP Paribas Open (March), Modernism Week (February into March), Coachella and Stagecoach (April)
Spring is what most people picture when they think of Palm Springs. The temperatures are perfect in March: warm enough for a pool in the afternoon, cool enough for a walk at 7pm. Modernism Week draws architecture obsessives from everywhere. The BNP Paribas Open is legitimately one of the best tennis events in the world and worth planning around.
April brings Coachella and Stagecoach, which transform the eastern Coachella Valley around Indio. If you're coming for the festivals, plan months ahead. If you're not, you'll find Palm Springs itself quieter than you'd expect since most festival crowds stay closer to the venues in Indio.
May is the transition month. Crowds thin and prices drop as temperatures climb toward the 90s. It's still very doable, especially if you structure your day around mornings and evenings. Our guide on Coachella Valley weekends covers the spring logistics in more detail.
Timing matters more in the desert than almost anywhere else. The Sundune is available year-round. Rates drop significantly in summer if you can handle the heat. Check availability →
Summer: June to August
Temperatures: 100-115°F days, 70-80°F nights Crowds: Low Events: Splash House (August), pool parties, weekend events at resort hotels
I'm going to be honest about summer: the heat is real. At 2pm in July, stepping outside feels like standing in front of an open oven. That's not an exaggeration.
And yet. The hotel rates can drop 50% from peak season. The pools are actually uncrowded. Desert evenings, once the sun drops, are warm and clear in a way that genuinely feels nice rather than punishing.
Splash House
Splash House is a pool festival held across three Palm Springs hotels in June and again in August. The venues rotate but usually include the Margaritaville, Renaissance, and Saguaro. You get a wristband that lets you move between all three hotel pools. Music runs throughout the day, and the programming leans toward electronic and house.
It's the reason summer in Palm Springs has real value beyond just cheap rates. The Splash House weekends are genuinely fun, and the weeks around them are the quietest and most affordable in the whole calendar year. If you're price-sensitive and heat-tolerant, this is the move. Check the schedule at splashhouse.com.
The summer playbook: book a rental with a private pool, plan outdoor activities before 9am and after 6pm, embrace the afternoon as an indoor reading hour. People who try to replicate their spring or fall trip itinerary in summer get in trouble. People who lean into the rhythm of the desert heat have a good time.
Summer in Palm Springs is a pool trip, not a hiking trip. Work with that and you'll be fine.
Fall: September to November
Temperatures: 85-100°F in September, dropping to 70-85°F in October-November Crowds: Thinning from summer crowds, building toward peak by late November Events: Desert Arts Festival, Pride events (October), Joshua Tree Music Festival
September still has full desert heat. If you're not prepared for that, wait until October. But October and November are legitimately the best-kept secret in Palm Springs. The temperatures are perfect, the summer crowds are gone, peak season hasn't started, and the light is extraordinary.
I've had what I'd call my favorite Palm Springs trips in early November. Everything is open, nothing is overcrowded, and the desert has this amber late-afternoon light that photographers make entire careers chasing. Palm Springs Pride in early November draws a lively crowd without overwhelming the city. VillageFest, the weekly Thursday night street fair on Palm Canyon, runs year-round and is worth catching at least once.
If you want the weather of spring without the crowds and prices of spring, October to mid-November is the answer. It won't stay a secret forever.
Fall afternoons have some of the best light in the desert. October in particular earns its reputation among photographers.
Month-by-Month Quick Reference
| Month | Avg High | Avg Low | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| January | 70°F | 44°F | Modernism Week, cool nights |
| February | 74°F | 47°F | BNP Paribas Open, wildflower season |
| March | 80°F | 52°F | Peak season begins, Coachella prep |
| April | 89°F | 57°F | Coachella and Stagecoach weekends |
| May | 98°F | 65°F | Crowds thin, pool season opens |
| June | 107°F | 74°F | Splash House, low rates |
| July | 108°F | 79°F | Hottest month, outdoor activities before 8am only |
| August | 107°F | 78°F | Splash House again, monsoon storms possible |
| September | 101°F | 72°F | Still hot, rates stay low |
| October | 91°F | 61°F | Shoulder season, hiking window opens |
| November | 78°F | 51°F | Palm Springs Pride, Village Fest in full swing |
| December | 69°F | 43°F | Quiet season, Living Desert WildLights |
The BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells. One of the best tennis events in the world, and a reason hotel rates spike across the entire valley in March.
The One Thing That Changes Everything
Whatever season you come, check whether there's a major event in the valley that week. Coachella, Stagecoach, the BNP Paribas Open, and a handful of other events can double hotel rates across the entire valley. If you're not coming for the event, build your trip around it, not into it.
For more on how to structure a Palm Springs visit by neighborhood, that guide pairs well with this one.
We have properties in both Indio (the east valley, close to Coachella) and Palm Springs (central, close to hiking and Downtown). Depending on what your trip is for, one will suit you better than the other.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best month to visit Palm Springs?
February and March are the closest to perfect: highs in the low-to-mid 70s, cool nights, and events like Modernism Week and the BNP Paribas Open filling out the calendar. October and early November are the best-kept secret, with near-identical weather, far fewer crowds, and rates well below peak season.
Is Palm Springs worth visiting in summer?
Yes, if you go in with a clear strategy. Book a rental with a private pool, plan outdoor activity before 9am and after 6pm, and lean into the afternoon as an indoor recovery hour. Hotel rates drop 40 to 50 percent from peak, and the pools are genuinely uncrowded. People who try to replicate a spring itinerary in summer struggle; people who embrace the heat rhythm have a good time.
When is Palm Springs the cheapest to visit?
June through September is off-season pricing. July is the cheapest month, with rates at their lowest and availability at its widest. The trade-off is 108°F average highs. October and November hit a sweet spot: prices have dropped from peak but the heat has broken.
What events should I avoid in Palm Springs if I want fewer crowds?
Coachella and Stagecoach in April, the BNP Paribas Open in March, and Modernism Week in February all spike rates across the entire valley. If you're not coming for those events, build your trip around the weeks before or after. Palm Springs Pride in early November draws a crowd but is smaller than the major events and keeps the city energetic without overwhelming it.
Plan Your Desert Trip
Whether you're coming in peak season or summer, we have properties in Palm Springs and Indio built for guests who want to enjoy the desert on its own terms.
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