Concrete Pouring Weather in Lafayette, IN: 10-Day Windows & Best Months
Lafayette gives you roughly 123 workable concrete pouring days a year, concentrated April through October. September leads the calendar with 21 workable days: average high 77°F, low 54°F, rain on 31% of days. Below: the live 10-day check and Lafayette's full month-by-month table.
GOOD — a clean label day MARGINAL — one borderline check NO — hard fail or stacked flags
The rules this check uses
Typical bagged-mix requirements for small DIY pours, scored against Lafayette's forecast above. The 48-hour freeze rule dominates every other row; structural work follows engineer/ACI specs instead of this table.
| Check | Threshold | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Air temperature | 40–90°F — ideal 50–85°F | DIY pours work from 40–90°F; 50–85°F is the sweet spot. |
| Overnight low | ≥40°F during the first 48 h | A low under 40°F inside the first 48 hours puts you in cold-weather concreting — not a DIY window. |
| Dry before | no soaking (≥1.0") in the prior 24 h | What fell before you start matters as much as what falls after — surfaces hold water invisibly. |
| Dry after | <0.1" rain for 6 h after (12 h light rain after finishing still risks surface marks) | The make-or-break window: rain here undoes the work, not just delays it. |
| Wind | ≤20 mph (rapid surface drying up to 28 mph) | Scored on the windiest working hour; the marginal band changes the method, not the day. |
Always follow your product label — formulas vary. Treat the table as the consensus range across brands — the label in your hand is the final word.
Best months for concrete pouring in Lafayette
| Month | Avg high | Avg low | Rain odds/day | Workable days | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| January | 33°F | 18°F | 30% | 0 | |
| February | 38°F | 22°F | 29% | 0 | |
| March | 50°F | 30°F | 34% | 0 | |
| April | 62°F | 40°F | 39% | 10 | |
| May | 72°F | 51°F | 41% | 18 | |
| June | 81°F | 60°F | 41% | 18 | |
| July | 84°F | 63°F | 38% | 19 | |
| August | 83°F | 62°F | 35% | 20 | |
| September | 77°F | 54°F | 31% | 21 | |
| October | 64°F | 43°F | 31% | 17 | |
| November | 50°F | 33°F | 33% | 0 | |
| December | 38°F | 24°F | 33% | 0 |
The working season runs April through October — about 123 workable days a year. The edges are night-limited: label rules want overnight lows of 40°F+, and Lafayette's nights only average that from April to October. Neighboring towns shift by a month or more — the Indiana comparison shows where Lafayette sits.
Flip side of the driveway calendar: sealing in Lafayette opens later and closes earlier than pouring, on the same forecast.
Climatology here is measured at Lafayette Purdue Univ Ap, In Us (7.6 km away). Treat the monthly numbers as the neighborhood average; a shaded north-side deck runs colder and damper than any of them. The exact formula lives in the methodology.
Lafayette by the numbers
- Peak heat lands in July: 84°F average highs and 0 ninety-degree days.
- January bottoms the Lafayette year: 33°F days, 18°F nights.
- Rain-day odds swing from 29% in February to 41% in May.
- Nights averaging 40°F+ run April through October.
- Annual workable concrete pouring days: about 123 of 365.
Prep checklist
- Check two nights, not one afternoon: both must hold 40°F+. In Lafayette that math works April through October — outside it, 18°F lows own the calendar.
- Stage everything before mixing: forms braced, base compacted and damp, tools rinsed, help booked.
- Cut plastic sheeting and weight it at the pour's edge — Lafayette sees rain on 31% of September days, and the 6-hour rule doesn't negotiate.
- Resist the watery mix: it finishes easier today and dusts forever after. Low slump wins.
- Work the sequence: screed on the sheen, float as it dulls, and leave bleed water alone.
- 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 Lafayette cold snap, a curing blanket guards the first 48 hours.
- Traffic schedule: feet at 24–48 hours, tires near day 7. Anything structural runs on engineer/ACI specs, not this checklist.
Gear that saves a window
Heads up: product links on this page may become affiliate links when the program is enabled. See the affiliate disclosure.
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IR surface thermometer
Track slab temperature, not just the forecast.
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Plastic sheeting
Emergency rain cover and moisture-holding cure layer.
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Edger + float set
Rounded edges and a flat surface before it sets.
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Curing blanket
Holds heat through cold nights in the critical 48 hours.
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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 Lafayette, nights average 40°F+ only April–October, 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. Lafayette's May sees rain 41% 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. Lafayette's freeze risk lives at the season edges: January averages 31 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. Lafayette's July highs average 84°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 Lafayette's September conditions (77°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 Lafayette?
The table above says September, August and July: 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.
Related
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Guides
Climatology: NOAA 1991–2020 normals via LAFAYETTE PURDUE UNIV AP, IN US (7.6 km from Lafayette center, elevation 599 ft); live outlook by Open-Meteo.