Weather comfort index balancing temperatures, rainfall, and seasonal extremes.
- Unit
- index
- Direction
- Higher is better
- Coverage
- 1013 city and 208 country values
Methodology note
STATLAS treats climate comfort as a comparable indicator, not a complete judgment about a place. Values are stored with source family, year, confidence, and refresh date. When source series differ by geography, STATLAS keeps the source visible and avoids hiding uncertainty behind a single opaque grade.
FAQs
What does Climate Comfort measure?
Climate Comfort measures weather comfort index balancing temperatures, rainfall, and seasonal extremes. STATLAS stores it as a environment metric with values in index.
Is a higher Climate Comfort value better?
For Climate Comfort, higher values are generally better. The direction is shown on metric pages, ranking pages, and comparison tables so users can read the number correctly.
How much coverage does Climate Comfort have?
Climate Comfort currently has 1013 city values and 208 country values in STATLAS, with source years covering 2026 to 2026.
Which sources support Climate Comfort?
Climate Comfort currently uses Wikidata as visible source families.