Concrete Pouring Weather in Long Beach, CA: 10-Day Windows & Best Months
Long Beach is one of the rare places where concrete pouring weather never fully closes: every month averages 8 or more workable days by NOAA 1991–2020 normals. August leads the calendar with 31 workable days: average high 83°F, low 66°F, rain on 1% of days. Below: today through day 10 against the label rules, then the year at a glance.
GOOD — every label check passes MARGINAL — one soft fail NO — hard fail or several soft
The rules this check uses
The Long Beach strip runs on these rows — bagged-mix consensus for DIY-scale work, ruled by the 48-hour freeze check. Structural pours answer to an engineer and ACI, not to this page.
| Check | Threshold | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Air temperature | 40–90°F — ideal 50–85°F | The film (or mix) chemistry runs on temperature — both while you work and for the first hours after. |
| Overnight low | ≥40°F during the first 48 h | Curing continues after dark; the first night can undo a perfect afternoon. |
| Dry before | no soaking (≥1.0") in the prior 24 h | Checked backward from your start hour using the two look-back days in the forecast data. |
| Dry after | <0.1" rain for 6 h after (12 h light rain after finishing still risks surface marks) | The engine sums forecast rain hour by hour through the cure window for Long Beach. |
| Wind | ≤20 mph (rapid surface drying up to 28 mph) | Hot wind pulls bleed water out faster than the slab can handle. |
Always follow your product label — formulas vary. The table above is the typical range across major manufacturers, not a promise about your can.
Best months for concrete pouring in Long Beach
| Month | Avg high | Avg low | Rain odds/day | Workable days | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| January | 67°F | 47°F | 19% | 25 | |
| February | 67°F | 48°F | 22% | 23 | |
| March | 69°F | 51°F | 18% | 26 | |
| April | 71°F | 54°F | 10% | 27 | |
| May | 73°F | 58°F | 5% | 29 | |
| June | 76°F | 61°F | 2% | 29 | |
| July | 81°F | 65°F | 2% | 31 | |
| August | 83°F | 66°F | 1% | 31 | |
| September | 82°F | 64°F | 2% | 29 | |
| October | 78°F | 59°F | 7% | 29 | |
| November | 72°F | 52°F | 11% | 27 | |
| December | 67°F | 47°F | 17% | 26 |
There is no off-season to plan around in Long Beach — the planning question is week-to-week, not month-to-month. The leanest stretch is December (26 workable days, average high 67°F); the richest is August with 31. The California table ranks every listed city by the same math.
Long Beach has a real wet/dry rhythm: February brings rain on 22% of days versus 1% in August. When the calendar gives you a August-side window, the dry-before and dry-after rules nearly take care of themselves.
Flip side of the driveway calendar: sealing in Long Beach opens later and closes earlier than pouring, on the same forecast.
Source honesty: every monthly figure on this page is the 1991–2020 normal at Long Beach Daugherty Fld, Ca Us, 2.4 km from Long Beach's center — your block's shade lines and wind exposure sit on top of that baseline. Scoring details are on the methodology page.
Long Beach by the numbers
- Hottest month: August — 83°F average high, 0 days topping 90°F.
- The cold floor is December at 67°F afternoons and 47°F overnight.
- Measurable rain: February leads at 22% of days; August is the quiet end at 1%.
- Bottom line for Long Beach: roughly 331 workable concrete pouring days a year.
Prep checklist
- Check two nights, not one afternoon: both must hold 40°F+. In Long Beach that math works year-round — outside it, 47°F lows own the calendar.
- Nothing gets mixed until the site is staged — braced forms, compacted damp base, rinsed tools, a second pair of hands.
- Cut plastic sheeting and weight it at the pour's edge — Long Beach sees rain on 1% of August days, and the 6-hour rule doesn't negotiate.
- Mix to a low slump — thick oatmeal, not soup; extra water now is a weak surface forever.
- Timing beats muscle — screed wet, float at the dull stage, and never chase bleed water with a trowel.
- Edge and joint with an edger + float set — control joints every 2–3 slab-thicknesses in feet.
- Cure damp: sheeting or misting for days; against a Long Beach cold snap, a curing blanket guards the first 48 hours.
- Keep feet off 24–48 hours and cars off a week; structural pours follow the engineer and ACI, full stop.
Gear that saves a window
Transparency note: gear links here become affiliate links only when the program is enabled — today they are plain references. See the affiliate disclosure.
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Curing blanket
Holds heat through cold nights in the critical 48 hours.
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Plastic sheeting
Emergency rain cover and moisture-holding cure layer.
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IR surface thermometer
Track slab temperature, not just the forecast.
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Concrete mix
An 80-lb bag yields about 0.6 cu ft — do the math twice.
FAQ
What temperature is too cold to pour concrete?
For DIY: any low under 40°F within 48 hours of the pour — that's cold-weather concreting (blankets, accelerators, monitoring), not a weekend job. In Long Beach, nights average 40°F+ only January–December, which is what actually frames the season above.
Can you pour concrete before rain?
Only with 6+ hours of margin: a 0.1"+ downpour before final set washes cement paste off the finish. After set, rain helps the cure. Long Beach's February sees rain 22% of days — keep plastic sheeting cut and weighted at the pour's edge regardless of the forecast.
How long does concrete need to be protected from freezing?
48 hours minimum — that's when early strength forms, and ice inside that window scales the surface and weakens the slab for good. Long Beach's freeze risk lives at the season edges: December averages 0 nights under 40°F. Insulated curing blankets are the DIY answer to a surprise cold snap.
Is it OK to pour concrete in hot weather?
The ideal band is 50–85°F; 85–90°F earns a flag and 90°F+ is out. Long Beach's July highs average 81°F, so heat rarely closes the window here — cold nights are the local constraint.
How long before you can drive on new concrete?
About 7 days for a passenger car in Long Beach's August conditions (83°F average highs — textbook cure speed); foot traffic after 24–48 hours. Cool weather stretches everything, because cure runs on temperature. Heavy vehicles wait longest, and the bag's schedule outranks any general rule, including this one.
Best season for concrete work in Long Beach?
The table above says August, July and September: enough warmth for the 48-hour cure, short of the 90°F ceiling. For small DIY pours that's the whole answer; structural pours schedule to engineer/ACI requirements, not to a best-months chart.
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Guides
Climatology: NOAA 1991–2020 normals via LONG BEACH DAUGHERTY FLD, CA US (2.4 km from Long Beach center, elevation 31 ft); live outlook by Open-Meteo.