Time to put your big coat back in the wardrobe?
Temperatures could reach 14c by the middle of this week according to the Met Office after a persistent period of gloom.
The Met Office said people could see sunshine return as soon as Monday in some parts of the country.
An ‘anticyclonic gloom’ brought dull skies and bitter weather to the country recently.
The weekend arrived with warnings of sleet, snow and freezing rain across parts of England.
Parts of the UK could continue to see snowfall throughout Sunday evening and into Monday – but then things are starting to look up.
The predicted temperatures of 14C by mid-week are well above February’s average, with 6C the usual monthly average in Scotland and 9C in southern England.
Met Office meteorologist Jonathan Vautrey said people would feel a ‘noticeable shift’ after the last fortnight, which was below average.
Don’t expect the temperatures to break records, though. February’s highest temperature was 21.2C recorded in 2019 in Kew Gardens, Vautrey added.
However, Met Office meteorologist Tom Morgan said some areas could go 10 days without any sunshine which is ‘near record-breaking’.
If Lyneham in Wiltshire remains cloudy on Sunday, it will equal the site’s February record for consecutive days without any sunshine.
More western areas are likely to see some rain during the week, while eastern areas are forecast to stay drier.
Rain and potentially snow are expected in some places, particularly around East Anglia and Lincolnshire over the weekend, and into Scotland towards the beginning of next week.
Morgan said: “We’ve basically got this battleground taking place over this weekend between cold air across Scandinavia and Central Europe, which is affecting eastern parts of the UK, but towards the west is a little bit milder.
“The Atlantic is trying to shift that cold air out of the way, pushing from west to east across the UK, but it’s a very slow process and it will take until the middle of the coming week for conditions to turn much milder nationwide.”