Bakersfield heads from midweek 80s heat into a cooler, wetter weekend as Kern County wind alerts stay up
Bakersfield CA – Warm low-80s weather holds through Thursday, then rain chances and a sharper cooldown arrive Friday into a potentially unsettled weekend.
Bakersfield’s run of unusually warm spring weather is expected to hold through Thursday, but the local forecast is now pointing to a cooler and more unsettled stretch heading into the weekend.
The practical takeaway for residents is straightforward: expect hot-to-warm conditions in town through midweek, then plan for changing weather Friday through Sunday. That shift matters most for people with outdoor work, youth sports, errands, weekend events, or highway trips through the more exposed parts of Kern County.
Warm in Bakersfield through Thursday, then cooler by Friday
The National Weather Service forecast for Bakersfield shows highs staying in the low 80s Wednesday and Thursday before easing back Friday and dropping further into the weekend. That is a noticeable change after several very warm valley days.
Rain chances enter the Bakersfield forecast on Friday, with a more active pattern Friday night into Saturday and at least some continued shower and thunder potential into Sunday. The broader trend is fairly clear even if the exact timing of rain bands and any thunderstorm coverage can still shift with later updates.
23ABC also reported this week’s setup as a warm valley pattern followed by a cooler weekend turn, with the best chances for rain and thunderstorms looking more likely later in the period than during the warm midweek stretch.
Wind concerns are mostly an eastern Kern travel issue
The wind headline is more important for drivers and travelers than for most people staying in central Bakersfield. The National Weather Service Hanford office said a Wind Advisory was issued for the Mojave Desert Slopes on the eastern side of the Tehachapi Range through late Wednesday morning, with northwest winds of 20 to 30 mph and gusts up to 50 mph.
That does not mean Bakersfield itself is facing the same level of wind concern. But it does matter for people driving through Tehachapi, Mojave, and other exposed eastern Kern corridors where crosswinds can make travel rougher than conditions in town suggest.
For commuters, delivery drivers, and anyone towing equipment or hauling loads, that corridor-based difference is the part to watch. A normal afternoon in Bakersfield can still line up with harder driving conditions farther east.
Why residents should pay attention now
This forecast shift lands at the point in the week when many families and workers start locking in Friday and weekend plans. If you have outdoor practices, games, yard work, vendor events, or travel plans, this is a good time to build in a backup option rather than assuming the midweek warmth will hold.
Outdoor crews may also want to treat Thursday and Friday as the transition window. Warm daytime conditions are still in place first, but the weekend forecast introduces a more changeable pattern with cooler air and at least periodic rain chances.
What to watch next
The most useful update window will be late Thursday and again on Saturday. By then, the National Weather Service should have a clearer read on when rain is most likely in Bakersfield, how long showers may linger, and whether thunder chances increase or shrink.
For now, the local signal is solid: Bakersfield stays warm through Thursday, turns cooler starting Friday, and heads into a weekend that looks more unsettled than the first half of the week. Residents traveling east through wind-prone Kern County routes should watch conditions especially closely.