‘Nobody likes drought’: Wichita got more rain in 2025. See that and other highlights
Despite a dry December, Wichita and many other areas in south-central Kansas finished off the year with higher-than-normal amounts of rain, according to National Weather Service data.
That is good news for an area that has been experiencing a drought over the last few years that led to mandatory water restrictions in Wichita from August 2024 to September 2025.
December’s 0.02 inches of rain is -1.20 inches under the average, according to the NWS.
Still, Wichita ended 2025 with 40.45 inches of rainfall, which ties the 12th most in records dating back to 1888. That amount is about 11.5 inches higher than 2024’s rainfall and almost 10 inches or higher than any year since 2019, when Wichita had 42.10 inches.
The most rain Wichita ever got in a year is 53.82 inches in 2008, followed by 50.60 in 2016 and 50.48 in 1951.
Chris Jakub, a NWS meteorologist in Wichita, said higher rainfalls in 2025 is “always a good thing.”
“No one likes drought, especially the farmers,” Jakub said about the previous drought. “Definitely played an impact on the city and metro area. ... Everything needs water.”
Sedgwick County is not currently in any drought, but part of it was earlier this year.
Wichita’s 40.45 inches of rain in 2025 is 6.14 inches above the average of the last 30 years. The highest 2025 rainfall the NWS Wichita reported in the region was 48.15 inches in Kingman, which makes it the wettest year since records started there in 1907.
Other noteworthy statistics for Wichita from 2025, according to the NWS:
- The average temperature for the year was 58 degrees, which is 0.3 degrees warmer than the average of the last 30 years.
- The hottest temperature of the year was 102 degrees on Aug. 8, making it the latest-in-the-year 100-plus degree day since 1928. It was also the only 100-plus degree day of the year, which was the least amount of triple digit days since 1992.
- The most rain in one day was 4.19 inches on June 17, which led to flooding in the city.
- The June 17 storm also produced a 102 mph wind gust, making it the highest wind gust ever recorded in Wichita.
This story was originally published January 3, 2026 at 3:05 PM.