Change Weather App Temperature Units to Celsius in iOS 13 [Tutorial]

Jan 17, 2020 at 09:30am EST
How to switch Weather app temperature units to Celsius

Here's how you can switch the Weather app temperature units to Celsius from Fahrenheit in iOS 13 running on an iPhone.

Learn to Switch the Weather App Temperature Units to Celsius or Fahrenheit on the Fly and Never Get into Unit-Based Conversations Again

Depending on where you live, you either check your local temperature in either Celsius or Fahrenheit. This is obviously a choice in the Weather app on the iPhone as well. And little do people know that it's fairly easy to switch between the two as well. In today's tutorial we will show you how to change the Weather app temperature units to Celsius from Fahrenheit or the other way around.

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Tutorial

Step 1. Launch the Weather app.

Step 2. Tap on the List icon on the bottom right hand corner of the display.

Step 3. You'll see the Celsius and Fahrenheit switching button on the bottom left. Switch to your preferred unit from here.

That's it, there's nothing more to it, really. In case you're wondering at this point, the default temperature unit is set based on the region set on the device. But of course, with a simple press of a button you can just change the Weather app temperature units on the fly.

While this method applies to the iPhone running iOS 13, there's a weather widget in iPad running iPadOS which shows the temperature in either Celsius or Fahrenheit. In order to switch between units on the iPad, simply navigate to Settings > General > Language & Region and then tap on Temperature Unit. Just select your preferred weather units and you are good to go. You can use the same method on your iPhone too, though you have a simple little switch in the Weather app and that's more than enough. But hey, options, right?

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About the author: Uzair has been writing about tech for a little under 10 years. Started off in the Symbian days, migrated to Android, eventually settling on iOS and Mac to make a living. Loves photography, drones, talking about the latest tech, and firmly believes that iPad is the future of computing. Served as Editor-in-Chief with Redmond Pie for five years, author at The Readers Eye and many other freelance gigs. Wccftech is now his current home.

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