The UK is set to be even hotter tomorrow as temperatures could soar to a sweltering 35C with an amber health alert extended across England.
Forecasters issued the alert which will cover London, the East Midlands, the South East, the South West and the East of England, and is set to remain in place until 6pm tomorrow.Â
The Met Office say a rare amber alert is only deployed when they think there is a ‘potential risk to life and property’ and marks the second time it has been issued in two weeks.
The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) has also activated a five-day alert due to concerns that there could be ‘a rise in deaths, particularly among those ages 65 and over or with health conditions’.
Images from today showed packed out beaches and rammed swimming pools of people frolicking in the water, while tennis fans braved the red-hot weather to face the scorching conditions on day one of Wimbledon.
Temperatures in SW19 were today so hot that an elderly member of the crowd on Centre Court fainted during Carlos Alcaraz’s first-round tussle with Fabio Fognini.
The Spaniard was leading 3-0 in the decider when he alerted the umpire to an incident in the stands before he brought the stricken spectator a cold bottle of water from the bucket behind his seat.
It was the hottest opening day in Wimbledon history with the heat reaching 33C, surpassing the previous record of 29.3C in 2001.
Greg Dewhurst, a meteorologist at the Met Office, told MailOnline that the hottest temperatures would hit the southeast of England tomorrow, particularly in London.
And a map issued by the forecasters shows that they expect temperatures could hit a sizzling 35C.

BRIGHTON: Images from today showed packed out beaches and rammed swimming pools of people frolicking in the water

WIMBLEDON: Tennis fans are braved the weather to face scorching conditions on day one in SW19

BRIGHTON:Â Two people cool off under beachside showers during the scorching heat

WIMBLEDON:Â Carlos Alcaraz hands over his water bottle after a spectator fainted due to the hot weather

This map issued by the Met Office shows the ‘max temps’ tomorrow could see, with London showing up as potentially reaching 35C

WIMBLEDON:Â A spectator fans themselves in the hot weather on day one of The Championships

WIMBLEDON:Â Tennis supporters use fans and water spray to stay cool amid the red-hot weather

RIPPONDEN: An aerial photograph taken with a drone of an ancient packhorse bridge revealed by low water levels at Baitings Reservoir
If reached, London would be hotter than Lisbon, Barcelona, Hawaii, Mexico City and Barbados.
The record temperature for England was recorded on July 19, 2022, when Coningsby, Lincolnshire, saw an astonishing 40.3C reached.
And today’s heat of 33C almost broke the hottest ever June temperatures of 35.6C recorded in Southampton in 1976.
Tomorrow’s warning comes as Europe continued to be blasted by record temperature highs with a deadly ‘heat dome’ scorching the continent.
Spain recorded its hottest June day on record at the weekend, with 46C recorded in El Granado, in the AndalucÃan province of Huelva.
The highest temperature previously recorded for June was 45.2C logged in Seville in 1965. Spain’s state meteorological agency said the latest heatwave would likely persist.
A new record high for June was also recorded in Mora in Portugal yesterday at 46.6C (116F), according to the national meteorological agency.

ITALY: Elsewhere queues form for public fresh drinking water stations in the Italian capital

 TURKEY: Residents watched on in horror as the fire spread into neighbourhoodsÂ

FRANCE: A beachgoer in Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer in southern France brings his chair into cooler territoryÂ

PORTUGAL: A man sunbathes near the Tagus River in Lisbon as a heat bomb hits EuropeÂ
Seven regions in central and southern Portugal, including Lisbon, were placed on red alert for the second day running on Monday, with fire warnings in many forest areas.
Authorities advised people ‘not to go out’ during the hottest hours, reporting heat strokes and burns as the heatwave took hold.
Across the UK, sunseekers descended on beaches to try and cool off from the soaring temperatures. Â
Both Brighton and Bournemouth beaches experienced congestion levels that are significantly higher than normal.
Thousands of Wimbledon spectators pitched tents outside the All England Club last night in a bid to secure tickets, but the tropical temperatures proved too much for some who were forced to abandon their spot in the queue ‘until it was cooler’.Â

ENGLAND: A scorched golf course in Peterborough, Cambridgeshire offered little in the way of fairway grass on Monday

BRIGHTON: Sunseekers arrived en masse to East Sussex where the beach was visibly packed

BRIGHTON: Photos showed packed out beaches and rammed swimming pools as people try and escape the heat

TYNEMOUTH: People attempted to cool off in the North Sea at King Edwards Bay

BOURNEMOUTH:Â Sun worshippers bagged themselves an early spot on the beachÂ

TYNEMOUTH: Girls took to the water in an attempt to cool off from the blistering heat

TYNEMOUTH: Sunbathers enjoyed the warm weather at King Edwards Bay

LYME REGIS: Sunbathers flocked to the packed beach at the seaside resort to bask in the scorching hot sunshine

Graphic showing traffic congestion at Bournemouth beach over the past weekÂ

Graphic showing traffic congestion at Brighton beach over the past week

WALTON: Visitors enjoyed the weather in this Essex coastal town

WALTON: Beach-goers made sure to lather on the sunscreen to protect from the scorching temperatures

BOURNEMOUTH: This group of locals took to the beach in an attempt to bag a suntan on one of the hottest ever June days recorded in England

CAMEBRIDGESHIRE: People swim in the River Nene in Peterborough

WALTON: This pup had to jump into the water in order to cool down as he walked along the beach with his owners

WIMBLEDON: Spectators use wet towels to cool down at the Championships

WIMBLEDON: Handheld fans may be one of the most helpful products for tennis watchers this year

WIMBLEDON: Umbrellas were deployed on the lawns outside Wimbledon’s courts as fans looked to have a break in the shade

WIMBLEDON: A spectator shelters from the heat on day one of the 2025 Wimbledon Championships

WIMBLEDON: Stefanos Tsitsipas of Greece receives treatment during his first round men’s single match against Valentine Royer of France

WIMBLEDON: Spectators wearing strawberry masks pose on the first day of the 2025 Wimbledon Championships

WIMBLEDON: Umbrellas up around the courts today as temperatures rose well into the 30s

WIMBLEDON: Spectators in the morning sunshine deployed bucket hats, caps and umbrellas to hide from the heat

WIMBLEDON: Thousands of ticketless fans queued in the red-hot sunshine

WIMBLEDON: This combination of fan and umbrellas proved to be the trick for these two spectators

WIMBLEDON: Spectators on the hill shelter with fans and umbrellas to shelter from the sun on day one of the 2025 Championships

WIMBLEDON: A woman protects her arms and face from the sun as she sits in the crowd

WIMBLEDON: This camera operator found a quirky way to avoid being sunburnt

WIMBLEDON: Ons Jabeur of Tunisia get medical assistance during her match against Varvara Gracheva of France at the first round singles match

WIMBLEDON: It’s a good day for the branded Championship umbrella which was deployed almost everywhere you looked around the courts

LONDON: A woman stands in front of a sprinkler in Parliament Square

WIMBLEDON: Fans lay down and rest as they queue for tickets on the first day

 WIMBLEDON: Visitors use a fan to stay cool at the Championships in London

WIMBLEDON: Tennis fans soak up the sun on the hill while sipping on a Pimm’s

WIMBLEDON: Fans come prepared with fans to help manage the heat

WIMBLEDON: Spectators use umbrellas to protect from the sun

WIMBLEDON: Tennis fans protect themselves from the sun as they queue for tickets



WIMBLEDON: Britain’s Oliver Crawford during his first round match against Italy’s Mattia Bellucci
The toasty temperatures will threaten the UK’s June record of 35.6C – set in the famously hot summer of 1976.
Some fans were been forced to abandon the queue the for Centre Court because of the heat, saying they will come back when it is cooler.
Fans flocked to SW19 as Emma Raducanu led the biggest contingent of British tennis stars to storm Wimbledon in over 40 years.
It is a bumper year for Britons with an army of 23 players taking over – the most to get through since 1984.

WIMBLEDON: Tennis fans dressed as Sweden’s tennis player Bjorn Borg (L) and US tennis player John McEnroe (R)

WIMBLEDON: Tennis fans queue for tickets on the first day of the 2025 Wimbledon Championships

WIMBLEDON: Fans struggle under the rising temperatures in the Wimbledon queue

Wimbledon fans donning strawberry hats hoping to get tickets this morning

WIMBLEDON: Spectators wait in the baking sun in Wimbledon Park Â

WIMBLEDON: People sunbathe as temperatures rise in Wimbledon ParkÂ
George Sandhu, Deputy Superintendent at Well Pharmacy, is urging elderly and vulnerable Brits to consider staying in the shade or indoors during the hottest hours of the day.
He said: ‘While many people will be out enjoying the warm weather, elderly and vulnerable Brits who are at greater risk because they can have less control over their exposure to the sun.
‘Overexposure to the sun can lead to people becoming seriously unwell through overheating, dehydration, heat exhaustion and heatstroke.’
One group of six best friends from the US are set for another two or three hours in the queue after joining at 7am and flying eight and a half hours to the UK.
Lydia told MailOnline: ‘We’ve flew eight and a half hours from Florida yesterday, some of us are from New Jersey and Texas as well. We can’t wait for the games and we are rooting for Coco Gauff.’
Jennie added: ‘We’re want to attended for the next three days so we will be queuing up every day.
‘We’re from Florida, so the heat is fine for us, but we were not expecting this in England. We have our umbrellas for shade and plenty booze and card games. We’ve already had three bottles of bubbly so far this morning!’
Elsewhere in the UK, footage from Highland and Moray, in the Scottish Highlands, showed wildfires and smoke obscuring the landscape as fire crews battle blaze that has been burning since Saturday morning.Â
The blazes, which have been whipped up by strong winds and dry weather, have stretched several miles in places – and even sparked warnings for communities as far away as Forres and Elgin to keep windows shut.Â

SCOTLAND: A gamekeeper tacking a wildfire – they have warned such blazes are ‘becoming a danger to human life’

SCOTLAND: A gamekeeper using a leafblower at a wildfire

SCOTLAND: Footage from Highland and Moray in the Highlands shows wildfires and smoke obscuring the landscape

SCOTLAND: Video and pictures show wildfires that have been blazing for three days amid a heatwave

WIMBLEDON: One group of six best friends from the US are set for another two or three hours in the queue after joining at 7am and flying eight and a half hours to the UK (Pictured:Â Laurie, Jennie, Amy, Sandra, Lydia and Lindy)

WIMBLEDON: A few people try and find shelter from the heat under umbrellas

WIMBLEDON: People queue at the entrance on the first day of the Tennis Championships

WIMBLEDON: Spectators arrived to form a long queue

WIMBLEDON: Maria and her family in the overnight queue on day one of the 2025 Championships

WIMBLEDON: People queue at the entrance on the first day

WIMBLEDON: A spectator in the overnight on day one of the 2025 Championships at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club

WIMBLEDON: An aerial view shows the vast queue of tents

WIMBLEDON: Much of England is forecast to be hotter than holiday spots in Barbados, Jamaica and Mexico

WIMBLEDON: People sleeping in the queue at Wimbledon ahead of day one

The clean up operation begins at the end of the Glastonbury Festival at Worthy Farm

SOMERSET: Litter pickers collect rubbish from the field of the Pyramid Stage at the end of the Glastonbury

SOMERSET: The Glastonbury clean up continued this morning

SOMERSET: The catering area covered in litter ahead of the clean up operation at the end of the festival

WIMBLEDON: A second amber heat health alert in two weeks came into force on Friday

WIMBLEDON: People entered the queue in the early hours of this morning

WIMBLEDON: Some of those queuing up decided to freshen up before joining the queue – with this man brushing his teeth

WIMBLEDON: While many in the queue pitched up a tent overnight, this man decided he could make do with a neck pillow while he caught some sleep
Tennis fans were given a shock this morning after being told to stay away from Wimbledon as it is already ‘at capacity’.
Earl’s Court tube station, a popular changeover point en route to Wimbledon, was packed with tennis fans who had flown in from all over the world.Â
But an announcement over the PA system quickly put a dampener on the excitement after it was revealed the grounds were already ‘at capacity’ before 9am.
Those who had opted for a slightly later lie-in faced disappointment then when they were told that non-ticket holders risk not getting in, or at best ‘several hours’ waiting in the queue with temperatures soaring for the rest of the day.
An update from Wimbledon’s official website on Monday read: ‘Please be aware that the Queue for Day 1 – Monday 30th June – is very busy and to avoid disappointment we strongly advise you not to travel to the Grounds today.’
On Sunday, firefighters mobilised in several European nations to tackle blazes as southern Europeans sought shelter from punishing temperatures of a heatwave that is set to intensify in the coming days.Â
Fires broke out in France and Turkey Sunday, with other countries already on alert.
Authorities from Spain to Portugal, Italy and France urged people to seek shelter and protect the most vulnerable from the summer’s first major heatwave.
Ambulances stood on standby near tourist hotspots as experts warned that such heatwaves, intensified by climate change, would become more frequent.
In Turkey, forest fires broke out Sunday afternoon in the western Izmir province, fed by strong winds, local media reported.
In France, meanwhile, wildfires broke out in the Corbieres area of Aude in the southwest, where temperatures topped 40C, forcing the evacuation of a campsite and abbey as a precaution.Â
The country’s weather service Meteo France put a record 84 out of its 101 regional departments on an orange heatwave alert – the second-highest – for Monday.Â
Spain’s weather service AEMET said temperatures in Extremadura and Andalusia, in the south and southwest, had reached up to 44C Sunday and issued a special warning amid the heatwave.
Several areas in the southern half of Portugal, including Lisbon, are under a red warning until Monday night, said the Portuguese Institute for Sea and Atmosphere (IPMA).Â

LONDON: woman cools off her dogs in front of a large fan at an Underground station

LONDON: A woman cools off in front of a large fan at an Underground station

CAMBRIDGESHIRE: People enjoy the hot weather as they swim at Peterborough Lido

A heat bomb has hit Europe with Spain’s national weather agency issuing a special warning

Temperatures are set to be higher than 34C tomorrow. This has only occurred three times in June since 1960Â
Two-thirds of Portugal was also on high alert Sunday for extreme heat and forest fires – as was the Italian island of Sicily, where firefighters tackled 15 blazes Saturday.
In Italy, 21 cities were on high alert for extreme heat, including Milan, Naples, Venice, Florence and Rome.
‘We were supposed to be visiting the Colosseum, but my mum nearly fainted,’ said British tourist Anna Becker, who had travelled to Rome from a ‘muggy, miserable’ Verona.
Hospital emergency departments across Italy have reported an uptick in heatstroke cases, according to Mario Guarino, vice president of the Italian Society of Emergency Medicine.
‘We’ve seen around a 10 percent increase, mainly in cities that not only have very high temperatures but also a higher humidity rate. It is mainly elderly people, cancer patients or homeless people, presenting with dehydration, heat stroke, fatigue,’ he said.
In Venice, authorities offered free guided tours for people over 75s in air-conditioned museums and public buildings.
Bologna has set up seven ‘climate shelters’ with air conditioning and drinking water, Florence has called on doctors to flag up the lonely and vulnerable, Ancona is delivering dehumidifiers to the needy, and Rome has offered free access to city swimming pools for those over 70.Â
In Portugal, several areas in the southern half of the country, including the capital Lisbon, are under a red warning for heat until Monday night, according to the Portuguese Institute for Sea and Atmosphere.Â

THE HAGUE: Bathers spend time in the sun on the beach in Scheveningen

THE HAGUE: A beach where sunseekers are trying to enjoy the soaring temperatures

THE HAGUE: One man sits under an umbrella to protect himself from the sun

SEVILLE: A woman uses a hand fan to cool off during the first summer heatwave in Spain

SEVILLE: Women cool off in a public fountain during the first summer heatwave
In France, experts warned that the heat was also severely impacting biodiversity.
‘With this stifling heat, the temperature can exceed 40 degrees in some nests,’ said Allain Bougrain-Dubourg, president of the League for the Protection of Birds.
‘We are taking in birds in difficulty everywhere; our seven care centres are saturated,’ he said.
It is also attracting invasive species, which are thriving in the more tropical climes.
The alert, which covered London, the East Midlands, South East, South West and East of England, will last until 6pm on Tuesday.
The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) also issued a yellow alert for Yorkshire and Humber and the West Midlands for the same time period, with the agency warning of significant impacts across health and social care services.
An amber alert was previously issued for all regions in England on June 19, the first time it had been used since September 2023.Â
An official heatwave is recorded when areas reach a certain temperature for three consecutive days, with thresholds varying from 25C to 28C in different parts of the UK.

The intense heat is set to continue across Europe tomorrow with temperatures reaching 37C in France
London Fire Brigade assistant commissioner Thomas Goodall said: ‘London is already facing its second heatwave of the year and we know that people will be looking forward to getting outside to enjoy the wonderful weather.
‘But the high temperatures and low rainfall in recent months means the current risk of wildfires is severe.
‘So far this year, firefighters have responded to around 14 wildfires in the capital.
‘There have also been countless call outs to smaller fires involving grass, trees and in other outdoor spaces, as well as in people’s gardens.
‘During this latest heatwave, it is important everyone acts responsibly to prevent fires from occurring.
‘As the weather has been so dry, it only takes a few sparks to lead to a fire spreading rapidly.
‘In London, this is can be dangerous because so many of our green spaces lie close to homes and other properties.’
There will be a ‘marked difference’ in north-western parts of the UK however, with cloud and heavy rain in parts of Northern Ireland and Scotland, where temperatures will stay in the mid to high teens, Mr Lenhert said.
The hottest ever July 1 on record was in 2015, when the temperature hit 36.7C.