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Concrete Pouring Weather in Santa Fe, NM: 10-Day Windows & Best Months

Santa Fe gives you roughly 109 workable concrete pouring days a year, concentrated May through September. The single best month is June, averaging 25 days that clear every check — highs of 84°F, lows near 50°F, and a 18% daily rain chance. Below: the live 10-day check and Santa Fe'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 Santa Fe's forecast above. The 48-hour freeze rule dominates every other row; structural work follows engineer/ACI specs instead of this table.

Typical label thresholds for concrete pouring — the ruleset behind every Santa Fe verdict above.
CheckThresholdWhy 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 Santa Fe

How Santa Fe months rank: temperature-rule days minus NOAA rain odds, from 1991–2020 normals. An estimate for planning, not a forecast.
MonthAvg highAvg lowRain odds/dayWorkable days 
January 43°F 18°F 12% 0
February 48°F 21°F 13% 0
March 57°F 26°F 13% 0
April 64°F 32°F 13% 0
May 74°F 41°F 15% 15
June 84°F 50°F 18% 25
July 86°F 55°F 31% 22
August 83°F 54°F 32% 21
September 78°F 47°F 21% 24
October 66°F 35°F 15% 3
November 53°F 24°F 13% 0
December 43°F 18°F 13% 0

Figure 109 workable days a year in Santa Fe, spread across May through September. Shoulder months turn on the overnight rule: an afternoon at 74°F passes, but the 40°F night floor is what actually opens the season in May. Neighboring towns shift by a month or more — the New Mexico comparison shows where Santa Fe sits.

The rain odds swing hard across the year — 12% of days in January up to 32% in August. Season the plan accordingly: prep in the wet months, apply in the dry ones.

Sealing the same driveway later? Sealcoating in Santa Fe wants warmer nights (50°F+) than the pour did.

Climatology here is measured at Santa Fe 2, Nm Us (4.8 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.

Santa Fe by the numbers

Prep checklist

  1. Clear the 48-hour rule first: two nights over 40°F. May opens that door in Santa Fe; December (18°F average lows) slams it.
  2. Stage everything before mixing: forms braced, base compacted and damp, tools rinsed, help booked.
  3. Cut plastic sheeting and weight it at the pour's edge — Santa Fe sees rain on 18% of June days, and the 6-hour rule doesn't negotiate.
  4. Resist the watery mix: it finishes easier today and dusts forever after. Low slump wins.
  5. Work the sequence: screed on the sheen, float as it dulls, and leave bleed water alone.
  6. Edge and joint with an edger + float set — control joints every 2–3 slab-thicknesses in feet.
  7. Hold the moisture in (sheeting or misting); when September nights dip toward 47°F, a curing blanket is the difference.
  8. 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

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FAQ

What temperature is too cold to pour concrete?

The line is a 40°F low inside the first 48 hours; an actual freeze (32°F) physically damages young concrete. Santa Fe's December nights average 18°F — firmly out — while June nights hold near 50°F. Small pours only; structural work follows engineer/ACI specs.

Can you pour concrete before rain?

The engine wants 6 protected hours; light rain later actually feeds the cure. With 32% rain-day odds in August versus 12% in January, Santa Fe's dry-season pours barely think about this rule and wet-season pours live by the radar. For small DIY pours; structural schedules follow ACI.

How long does concrete need to be protected from freezing?

Keep it above freezing for at least the first 48 hours (the engine calls any sub-40°F low in that window a NO). In Santa Fe that rules out roughly December-adjacent months entirely and makes shoulder-season pours a two-night forecast decision. DIY scope; anything structural follows engineer/ACI cold-weather practice.

Is it OK to pour concrete in hot weather?

To a 90°F high, yes — with shade, cool mix water, a damp subgrade, and a dawn start. Above 90°F the surface sets while the core is plastic and shrinkage cracks map the slab. Santa Fe averages 0 such days in July — rarely the binding constraint here.

How long before you can drive on new concrete?

A week before tires, 24–48 hours before feet — at June-typical Santa Fe temperatures (84°F highs). When nights slide toward 18°F, add days: cure speed is temperature. Early loads print permanent marks; the bag's cure table wins every argument.

Best season for concrete work in Santa Fe?

The table above says June, September 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.

Other projects in Santa Fe

Concrete Pouring nearby

Guides

Climatology: NOAA 1991–2020 normals via SANTA FE 2, NM US (4.8 km from Santa Fe center, elevation 6756 ft); live outlook by Open-Meteo.