¿Debo abrir las ventanas en München ahora?
Decisión en vivo para München. Actualizada cada 30 minutos.
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Decisión en vivo para München. Actualizada cada 30 minutos.
Locating you…
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Today's windows
Updated: — ·
Enter your city or postcode
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Munich (München) sits at 520 metres in the Alpine foothills, giving it a cooler, cleaner climate than northern German cities and a distinctive atmospheric phenomenon: the Föhn. This warm, dry southerly wind can raise temperatures by 10–15°C in hours, bringing sudden warmth in any season and unusually clear skies where the Alps are visible from the city centre.
Föhn days are excellent ventilation opportunities — air quality is outstanding and the pressure inversions that normally trap urban pollution are broken. Munich has some of Germany's best outdoor air quality year-round (AQI typically 10–25), helped by its elevation, Alpine proximity, and Bavaria's strict environmental standards.
Bavarian winter ventilation follows the Stoßlüften tradition. The cold Alpine air (−5 to 5°C from November to March) is clean and dry — brief ventilation effectively refreshes indoor CO₂ without significant heat loss if done quickly. Munich's thick-walled building stock retains heat well between ventilation bursts.
En München, los mejores momentos para ventilar son por la mañana temprano (5–8) y después del atardecer, cuando la temperatura exterior baja de la interior.
Sí, en la mayoría de los casos. Abrir las ventanas puede bajar la temperatura interior 2–5°C en 30 minutos si el aire exterior es más fresco.
Por encima del 80% de humedad, abrir ventanas hace el aire pegajoso. Mejor esperar a horas más secas.