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Measure the weather where you live

Most weather forecasts come from stations located at airports or regional monitoring sites. Those stations can be several kilometres away from your home, sometimes in completely different conditions.

A personal weather station measures the atmosphere exactly where you live — in your garden, on your roof, or in your backyard.

PersonalWeatherStation.com exists to help homeowners, gardeners, and weather enthusiasts understand, choose, install, and troubleshoot personal weather stations so they can measure their own local conditions with confidence.


Why personal weather stations matter

Weather is extremely local.

A forecast might say it’s 18°C and dry, while your garden is experiencing cooler air, stronger wind, or unexpected rainfall. Small differences in elevation, nearby buildings, trees, or open land can all change the weather around your home.

A personal weather station gives you real data from your own location, helping you:

  • monitor rainfall and temperature around your property
  • understand frost risk for gardens and plants
  • track wind conditions
  • analyse weather patterns over time
  • connect your home to wider weather networks like Weather Underground

For many people it also becomes an enjoyable hobby — collecting and analysing weather data from their own backyard.


What you’ll find on this site

PersonalWeatherStation.com focuses on practical information for people who want reliable local weather data.

The site includes:

Buying guides
Clear comparisons of popular personal weather stations so you can choose the right one for your needs and budget.

Product reviews
Realistic evaluations of well-known models from brands such as Ambient Weather, Davis Instruments, WeatherFlow, AcuRite, and others.

Setup and installation guides
Advice on mounting height, sensor placement, and calibration so your station produces accurate readings.

Troubleshooting help
Solutions to common problems such as inaccurate temperature readings, rain gauges that underreport rainfall, Wi-Fi connectivity issues, and sensor failures.

The goal is simple: provide clear, practical guidance for measuring the weather where you live.


Who this site is for

Most readers fall into one of three groups.

Homeowners and gardeners who want to understand conditions around their property.

Weather enthusiasts who enjoy collecting and analysing atmospheric data.

Tinkerers and smart-home users who integrate weather data into home automation systems.

If you’ve ever wondered what the weather is actually doing in your own backyard, you’re in the right place.


About the author

Articles on this site are written under the name Backyard Forecaster, a long-time weather hobbyist with a particular interest in hyper-local weather measurement and home weather stations.

The aim isn’t to replace professional meteorology — it’s to help ordinary homeowners measure and understand the conditions where they live.


Affiliate disclosure

Some pages on this site contain affiliate links. This means the site may earn a small commission if you purchase a product through those links.

This does not affect the price you pay.

Recommendations are based on product reliability, accuracy, and real-world usability rather than promotional agreements. The goal is simply to highlight equipment that works well for homeowners and weather enthusiasts.


The big idea

Weather doesn’t behave the same everywhere — even within the same neighbourhood.

A personal weather station lets you see what’s really happening where you live.