Description
This product provides probabilistic weather forecasts for 5,956 sites (or spots) across the globe. It is produced by the Met Office IMPROVER Blended Probabilistic Forecast system. It is available in NetCDF format.
Blended Probabilistic Forecast data is derived from the Met Office's operational NWP (Numerical Weather Prediction) ensembles and nowcasts. To give more reliable predictions, these are then blended and calibrated using the IMPROVER pipeline, and verified using spread–skill and reliability checks.
This is 1 of 8 Blended Probabilistic Forecast products published by the Met Office on the Registry of Open Data on AWS. Data is available for the Global and UK domains, as gridded and spot (site-specific), and represented as percentiles and probabilities.
This info is correct as of April 2026, but some things (like the number of sites, parameters and timesteps) may change in future.
How probabilities work
Ensemble forecasts show a range of possible weather outcomes. However, some users may find it more useful to see ensemble forecasts presented as probabilities, particularly when they're interested in specific thresholds.
Probabilities are generated from an ensemble forecast by counting how many members of that ensemble exceed a particular threshold value. For example, if the threshold for screen temperature is 5°C, and 9 out of 18 ensemble members show a screen temperature above 5°C, there is a 50% chance of temperatures exceeding 5°C.
How spot data works
Spot data is derived by extracting site‑specific forecasts from post‑processed gridded forecasts.
IMPROVER operates on two domains:
- the UK domain, which primarily covers the region around the United Kingdom, Ireland and parts of Western Europe
- the Global domain, which covers the whole world
Within each domain, IMPROVER post-processes most forecasts on a grid, though the resolution of this grid differs between the two domains. Site-specific forecasts are drawn from these grids at the end of the post-processing chains. Sites within the UK domain draw forecasts from the high-resolution UK domain grid, as this should provide the best possible forecast, whereas sites outside of this domain draw from the lower resolution Global grid. The two domains are represented in two separate datasets.
Global domain sites
There are 5,956 sites in the Global domain. (The Global domain excludes the British Isles and parts of Western Europe. For sites in the UK, Ireland and the parts of Western Europe not included in the Global domain, please see the UK Spot Percentiles dataset.)
Site-specific forecasts in the Global domain are calculated from the MOGREPS-G model alone. However this model is time-lagged to provide additional forecast spread and reduce inter-cycle variation.
Parameters and timesteps
There are 33 weather parameters available including:
- Cloud
- Lightning
- Pressure
- Humidity
- Visibility
- Precipitation rate and accumulations
- UV
- Wind
For most parameters, the following timesteps are available:
- Every hour from 0 to 120 hours
- Every 3 hours from 123 to 192 hours
However, timesteps vary significantly for some parameters. Check the
parameter documentation for more details.
Latency
Data is made available shortly after the model blend time.
Archive length
Data is available for the past 30 days.
Business needs
This product supports risk-based decision-making by providing uncertainty ranges rather than single deterministic values. Typical uses include:
- assessing uncertainty for operational planning
- evaluating weather-related risk thresholds
- deriving deterministic products (e.g. 50th percentile) from probabilistic outputs
Spot forecasts provide information about weather diagnostics at single sites. By using a time series of these forecasts, you can determine how a weather diagnostic is expected to evolve at a particular location. This is ideal for users if you are not moving spatially and are instead interested in how conditions are evolving at your location. This is the kind of time-series information you see in the Met Office app when you look at a forecast for your home address.
Gridded forecasts show how a diagnostic varies spatially across a domain at a given time. By using a time series of gridded fields, you can determine how a weather diagnostic is expected to evolve across a geographic area. So you may find them more useful if you need to consider moving spatially. This kind of product is very familiar from television broadcast weather forecasts. Gridded Blended Probabilistic Forecasts are also available as percentiles and probabilities for both the UK and Global domains.
Update Frequency
4 times each day at around 00, 06, 12 and 18 UTC.
License
This product is licensed under CC BY-SA
Documentation
https://www.metoffice.gov.uk/services/data/external-data-channels
Managed By
Met Office
See all datasets managed by Met Office.
Contact
Please email our Service Desk at: servicedesk@metoffice.gov.uk and let them know which dataset you are using and that it’s from the Registry of Open Data on AWS.
Service desk is only available Mon – Fri, 09:00 until 17:00 UTC (-1 hour during BST). As a non-operational service we aim to respond to any service support enquiries within 3-5 business days.
How to Cite
Met Office Blended Probabilistic Forecast – Global spot probabilities was accessed on DATE from https://registry.opendata.aws/met-office-bpf-global-spot-probabilities.
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