Temperature

How hot is the hottest place on Earth?

Extreme temperature facts work best when compared with temperatures people already know from daily life.

Official record
56.7°C
Fahrenheit
134°F
Usefulness
Turn heat into comparisons

How hot is the hottest place on Earth?

NOAA’s record listing gives the highest official air temperature as 56.7°C / 134°F, recorded at Furnace Creek in Death Valley. That number is difficult to feel at first, because very few people experience anything close to it. But the difference becomes vivid once you convert it, compare it, and place it against ordinary summer heat.

At that level, “hot” is not just uncomfortable. It becomes something that changes what materials feel like, how fast people tire, and how dangerous simple outdoor activity can become.

Official record
56.7°C
In Fahrenheit
134°F
Reference place
Death Valley
Feeling
Beyond normal summer heat

Compare extreme heat with your local summer

Heat gap

Difference to the record

Why this helps

Most people know how 25°C, 30°C, or 35°C feels. The most useful comparison is often the gap. Once you see how far 56.7°C stands above a hot summer day, the number becomes much more intuitive.