Free tool Updated 2026Average peak UV 9 · Very high

UV Index in Rome

Live UV index for Rome, Italy. Personalised SPF, reapply timing, and protection advice for your skin type. Free, no signup, updated every 30 minutes.

41.90°, 12.50° · UV data refreshes every 30 minutes

UV in Rome: what to expect

Mediterranean climate; UV 9 routine June–August, with UV 10 days possible during heat domes.

Peak season

May – September

Average peak UV

9 (very high)

Country

Italy

Region

Europe

Sun safety for Rome

Rome runs in the very high UV band through May – September. Fair skin can burn in 15–25 minutes at noon. Daily SPF 50, hat, and shade between 11am and 3pm are basic protection. SPF 30 is enough only outside peak hours.

Reapply every 2 hours — every 90 minutes if outdoors continuously. Cloud cover reduces UV less than people assume; up to 80% gets through. Cumulative exposure across a summer adds up regardless of any single day's reading.

Whatever Rome's climatology says, the live reading above is what counts on the day you check. UV varies hour by hour; the widget shows current and forecast values so you can plan around peak hours.

Why daily UV awareness matters in Rome

UV exposure is the leading preventable cause of skin cancer. Each blistering sunburn before age 20 doubles melanoma risk in adulthood. Cumulative UV from daily, unprotected exposure causes basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, premature aging, and pigmentation disorders.

For residents of Rome, the practical impact of knowing today's UV is choosing the right SPF strength, the right outdoor schedule, and the right protective clothing for the next few hours — not abstract long-term advice. The widget above turns this into a 5-second daily check.

Read the full UV checker guide

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Sources & methodology

Live UV: Open-Meteo Air Quality API (CAMS atmospheric model + satellite + ground station inputs). City climatology values from NASA TEMIS UV climatology and CAMS reanalysis. SPF and reapply guidelines based on AAD, BAD, and WHO recommendations. Full editorial methodology →