Britain has recorded its hottest May temperature on record as a powerful early summer heatwave swept across the country, triggering packed beaches, overwhelmed parks, and a series of tragic drowning incidents over the Bank Holiday weekend.
According to the Met Office, temperatures reached 35.1°C in parts of southern England, surpassing the previous May record and making it one of the hottest spring days ever recorded in the UK.
The extreme conditions drew huge crowds to beaches, rivers, and lakes across Britain as families attempted to cool off during the unusually intense heat.
But the weekend was also marked by tragedy.
Emergency services confirmed that at least nine people died in separate drowning incidents across England and Wales, with several of the deaths believed to involve young people entering open water during the hottest periods of the day.
Water safety organisations and rescue services have now issued urgent warnings over the dangers of “cold water shock” — a condition that can rapidly incapacitate swimmers even during very hot weather.
Experts say many people wrongly assume rivers, lakes, and reservoirs are safe during heatwaves without realising water temperatures can remain dangerously cold beneath the surface.
The Royal National Lifeboat Institution warned that sudden immersion in cold water can trigger gasping, panic, breathing difficulties and cardiac stress within seconds.
The latest incidents have once again highlighted the hidden dangers linked to Britain’s increasingly frequent heatwaves.
Unlike many southern European countries, much of the UK lacks widespread outdoor swimming infrastructure, leading many people to seek relief in quarries, reservoirs, canals and fast-moving rivers not designed for public bathing.
In several areas, police and fire crews were forced to deploy drones, helicopters and specialist dive teams over the Bank Holiday weekend after multiple reports of swimmers getting into difficulty.
Across social media, reaction to the heatwave has been mixed between celebration and concern.
Images of packed beaches, crowded parks, and soaring temperatures spread rapidly across X, Instagram, and Facebook, with many users describing the weather as “unreal for May”.
But alongside the summer excitement, tributes and safety warnings also flooded online platforms following news of the drownings.
Many users criticised risky behaviour near rivers and reservoirs, while others called for stronger public education campaigns around open water safety.
Climate experts say the heatwave is part of a broader trend towards hotter and more unstable weather patterns across Britain.
Scientists have repeatedly warned that extreme heat events in the UK are becoming more frequent and more intense due to climate change, increasing pressure on emergency services, hospitals, and infrastructure.
Forecasters say temperatures are expected to ease slightly later this week, although many parts of England could remain well above seasonal averages.
For now, officials are urging people to enjoy the sunshine carefully and to exercise caution around open water despite the extreme heat.
