No upcoming precipitation for the next hour.
Last update: 04:00, 24 Jun 2026
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With Alpine foothills surrounding Bad Aibling and the Lech (Alpine tributary) as the primary drainage axis, rain events here develop and clear in ways a city-level forecast consistently misses.
The difference between a disrupted plan and a managed one in Bad Aibling is usually a 20-minute radar window — enough to see a cell crossing the Lech (Alpine tributary) catchment before it reaches you.
DWD's 17 dual-polarization Doppler radars scan Germany every 5 minutes and feed RainViewer directly — no smoothing, no interpolation. For Bad Aibling in Alpine foothills, that means the map reflects real conditions, not averaged ones.
**Transitional weather** The spring shoulder (April–May) sees Bad Aibling's Lech (Alpine tributary) catchment still saturated from winter, making it more responsive to rainfall than the bare figures suggest. Autumn (September–October) brings the reverse pattern: summer-dry soils that absorb the first rains, then flood risk that builds through October.
**Outdoor events and activities in Bad Aibling** Bad Aibling hosts outdoor markets, community events, and seasonal activities throughout the year. In Alpine foothills, a cell crossing the Lech (Alpine tributary) catchment can arrive faster than a multi-day forecast allows for. Checking the radar 30 minutes before an outdoor event in Bad Aibling confirms whether rain will arrive or track away.
**Regular Bad Aibling radar users** Direct traffic from Bad Aibling indicates a community that checks the radar by habit. For returning users, the 48-hour history view shows how cells typically track across Alpine foothills — useful context for reading the live map on any given day.
Rain data for Bad Aibling comes from the Deutscher Wetterdienst (DWD), Germany's national meteorological service. DWD operates 17 dual-polarization Doppler radar stations across Germany with 5-minute scan cycles, covering the Lech (Alpine tributary) catchment and Alpine foothills around Bad Aibling without gaps. Data is processed and served to RainViewer within seconds of each scan — no smoothing, no averaging, no delay. The map shows actual radar returns, not interpolated estimates.
Bad Aibling's position in Alpine foothills means rain cells from the Lech (Alpine tributary) catchment can arrive before any forecast update. The radar closes that gap.
the Lech (Alpine tributary) catchment boundary, your street, the Alpine foothills around Bad Aibling: all visible at 100 metres per pixel. 2-hour animated radar — see whether the cell crossing Alpine foothills will reach the Lech (Alpine tributary) catchment before your plans or after. Rain alerts for your exact location in Bad Aibling — fires 20 minutes before rain arrives, not when it's already overhead. Direction arrows on the map — see which way cells are tracking across Alpine foothills and whether they'll reach the Lech (Alpine tributary) catchment in Bad Aibling. Offline access in the app — the last radar scan for Bad Aibling stays available even when connectivity drops, useful in Alpine foothills. Multiple pinned locations — track the Lech (Alpine tributary) crossing, your home, and your workplace in Bad Aibling simultaneously.
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