About Weather Underground
I’ve been using Weather Underground for years, ever since I got tired of generic forecasts that were wrong for my neighborhood. This app is my go-to because it pulls data from thousands of personal weather stations, meaning the temperature and rain predictions are for my street, not just my city. I rely on it for everything from planning a run to deciding if I need to cover my garden.
Features & Highlights
The killer feature for me is the interactive radar map. I can zoom right into my local area, see exactly where a storm cell is headed, and watch it move in real-time. Last Tuesday, I saw a small green blob forming a few miles west and knew I had exactly 20 minutes to get my groceries inside before the rain hit. I was right. I also use the personalized severe weather alerts; I have mine set to ping me for lightning within 10 miles and any wind gusts over 40 mph. The air quality and pollen data is a lifesaver during allergy season—I check it every morning alongside the temperature. Being able to save my home, my office, and my parents’ house across the state makes checking on everyone’s weather a two-second task.
User Experience
Opening the app, I’m greeted with a clean snapshot of my current conditions: temp, “feels like,” humidity, wind, and a clear sky/rain icon. Tapping on the map icon immediately drops me into the radar, which is incredibly responsive to pinch-and-zoom. I remember frantically using it during a road trip through the Midwest, watching a line of severe storms approach the highway and helping us navigate around the worst of it. The layout is information-dense, which I appreciate, but I’ll admit it took me a day or two to find where everything was tucked away. My one gripe is that sometimes, especially during major weather events, the radar can be slow to refresh or the app might stutter for a second.
Pricing
The app is completely free to download and use with ads. The ads are usually banner-style at the bottom of the screen and aren’t overly intrusive. There is a premium subscription called “WUNDERGROUND PRO” that removes ads, adds higher-resolution radar, and offers more advanced forecast details. For my daily use, the free version has been more than sufficient. I’ve never felt pressured to upgrade, which is a nice change from other weather apps that lock basic features behind a paywall.
Updates & Support
The developers update the app fairly regularly, mostly for bug fixes and radar improvements. I haven’t noticed any major, ground-shaking feature overhauls recently, which is fine—it’s a stable, mature app. I contacted support once about a location-saving bug, and they responded within 48 hours with a helpful, non-automated reply that solved my issue. Their FAQ and community forums are also pretty active if you prefer to troubleshoot on your own.
Security & Privacy
I downloaded it directly from the official Google Play Store. Like any weather app, it needs your location to work its magic. Their privacy policy states they collect location data, device info, and usage data to provide forecasts and improve services. They say they don’t sell your personal data to third parties. The ads in the free version are targeted, meaning they use your data for ad personalization. If that’s a concern, you can use your device’s privacy settings to limit ad tracking or consider the Pro version to remove them entirely.