{"title":"Sunniest States","shortName":null,"slug":"sunniest-states","status":"Active","lastUpdated":"2026-04-01","type":"States","regionCount":null,"mapMinHeight":300,"mapImageUrl":"https://datawrapper.dwcdn.net/FMmMK/full.png","fancyMapUrl":null,"imageExtension":".png","mapSource":"custom","excerpt":"Ranked with 2019 data, Arizona gets 66% more solar energy than Washington, and Florida's \"Sunshine State\" label hides a 24th-place clear-day count.","indexable":true,"category":{"name":"Weather","slug":"weather"},"regions":[{"name":"Arizona","identifier":"arizona-us-state"},{"name":"New Mexico","identifier":"new-mexico-us-state"},{"name":"Nevada","identifier":"nevada-us-state"},{"name":"Texas","identifier":"texas-us-state"},{"name":"California","identifier":"california-us-state"},{"name":"Colorado","identifier":"colorado-us-state"},{"name":"Oklahoma","identifier":"oklahoma-us-state"},{"name":"Kansas","identifier":"kansas-us-state"},{"name":"Utah","identifier":"utah-us-state"},{"name":"Florida","identifier":"florida-us-state"},{"name":"Louisiana","identifier":"louisiana-us-state"},{"name":"Arkansas","identifier":"arkansas-us-state"},{"name":"Mississippi","identifier":"mississippi-us-state"},{"name":"Nebraska","identifier":"nebraska-us-state"},{"name":"Georgia","identifier":"georgia-us-state"},{"name":"Alabama","identifier":"alabama-us-state"},{"name":"South Carolina","identifier":"south-carolina-us-state"},{"name":"Missouri","identifier":"missouri-us-state"},{"name":"Tennessee","identifier":"tennessee-us-state"},{"name":"Wyoming","identifier":"wyoming-us-state"},{"name":"North Carolina","identifier":"north-carolina-us-state"},{"name":"Kentucky","identifier":"kentucky-us-state"},{"name":"Illinois","identifier":"illinois-us-state"},{"name":"Virginia","identifier":"virginia-us-state"},{"name":"South Dakota","identifier":"south-dakota-us-state"},{"name":"Iowa","identifier":"iowa-us-state"},{"name":"Indiana","identifier":"indiana-us-state"},{"name":"Maryland","identifier":"maryland-us-state"},{"name":"Idaho","identifier":"idaho-us-state"},{"name":"Delaware","identifier":"delaware-us-state"},{"name":"West Virginia","identifier":"west-virginia-us-state"},{"name":"Ohio","identifier":"ohio-us-state"},{"name":"New Jersey","identifier":"new-jersey-us-state"},{"name":"Wisconsin","identifier":"wisconsin-us-state"},{"name":"Michigan","identifier":"michigan-us-state"},{"name":"Rhode Island","identifier":"rhode-island-us-state"},{"name":"Connecticut","identifier":"connecticut-us-state"},{"name":"Minnesota","identifier":"minnesota-us-state"},{"name":"Massachusetts","identifier":"massachusetts-us-state"},{"name":"Pennsylvania","identifier":"pennsylvania-us-state"},{"name":"North Dakota","identifier":"north-dakota-us-state"},{"name":"New York","identifier":"new-york-us-state"},{"name":"New Hampshire","identifier":"new-hampshire-us-state"},{"name":"Montana","identifier":"montana-us-state"},{"name":"Oregon","identifier":"oregon-us-state"},{"name":"Vermont","identifier":"vermont-us-state"},{"name":"Maine","identifier":"maine-us-state"},{"name":"Washington","identifier":"washington-us-state"},{"name":"Hawaii","identifier":"hawaii-us-state"},{"name":"Alaska","identifier":"alaska-us-state"}],"content":[{"tocTitle":"The Desert Southwest Wins","contentTitle":"The Desert Southwest Gets More Sun Than Anywhere Else in the Country","content":"```\n**Arizona** leads the country in average annual sunlight at 5,755 kJ/m², roughly **66% more solar energy** than last-place Washington at 3,467 kJ/m². That gap is not gradual. Arizona and **New Mexico** (5,642 kJ/m²) sit far above the rest of the field, and then the rankings flatten into a long, steady decline through the remaining 46 states.\n\nThe reason is aridity, not latitude. Both states sit in the Sonoran and Chihuahuan Deserts, where extremely low humidity starves the atmosphere of the moisture it needs to build clouds. Yuma, Arizona, holds a [Guinness World Record](https://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/world-records/highest-annual-mean-percentage-of-sunshine) as the sunniest city on Earth: sunshine during roughly 91% of all daylight hours, more than 4,000 hours of sun per year, and about 308 clear days annually.\n\nArizona also leads in number of sunny days at 193, followed again by New Mexico at 167. No other state cracks 160. After those two, **Nevada** (158 sunny days) and **California** (146) fill out the top four, keeping the podium firmly in the arid West. The regional averages confirm the pattern: Western states average 4,678,000 kJ/m² of annual sunlight, compared to 3,928,000 kJ/m² in the Northeast, a difference of roughly **19%**.\n```","order":1,"faqs":[]},{"tocTitle":"Florida's Sunshine Myth","contentTitle":"Florida Is the Sunshine State. It Is Not the Sunniest.","content":"```\n**Florida** adopted \"The Sunshine State\" as its official nickname in 1970. It was a tourism pitch, not a weather report. In total solar energy, Florida ranks 10th at 4,859 kJ/m², a respectable number. But in actual clear-sky days, the count drops to just 101, tied for 24th with **Louisiana** and **Maine**.\n\nThe culprit is the sea breeze. Florida is a narrow peninsula flanked by the Gulf of Mexico to the west and the Atlantic to the east. On summer afternoons, the land heats faster than the surrounding water, pulling cool, moist air inland from both coasts. When those two sea breezes collide over the interior, the moisture gets shoved upward and builds into towering thunderheads. Central Florida averages more afternoon thunderstorms than almost anywhere else in the country.\n\nThe result is a state that gets intense sunshine for much of the morning, then loses it to clouds and rain by 3 p.m. The high subtropical sun angle and long daylight hours still deliver strong total radiation, which is why Florida's kJ/m² figure stays competitive. But for someone who wants uninterrupted blue sky from sunrise to sunset, **Arizona's 193 clear days** are nearly double Florida's 101.\n\n**Hawaii** tells a similar story in miniature. Its trade winds and mountainous terrain produce localized cloud cover and frequent rain showers, especially on windward slopes. Hawaii logs only 90 sunny days per year, placing it 36th out of 50 states, despite a reputation as a tropical paradise.\n```","order":2,"faqs":[]},{"tocTitle":"The Cascades Cloud Wall","contentTitle":"The Cascades Built a Wall of Clouds","content":"```\nAt the bottom of the rankings, a different kind of geography takes over. **Washington** receives less annual sunlight than any other state in the dataset: 3,467 kJ/m², nearly 40% less than Arizona. It also records just 58 sunny days per year, tied for last with **Vermont**.\n\nThe Cascade Range is the primary reason. Moisture-laden winds blow inland from the Pacific Ocean, and when they hit the Cascades, the air is forced upward. As it rises, it cools and condenses into a thick, persistent cloud layer that blankets everything west of the mountains. Seattle, Portland, and the rest of the I-5 corridor live under this gray ceiling for much of the fall, winter, and spring.\n\n**Oregon** sits just above Washington with 3,830 kJ/m² in solar energy and 68 sunny days. The same orographic lift drives Oregon's cloudiness, though Portland gets slightly more summer clearing than Seattle. East of the Cascades, both states are dramatically sunnier, but the statewide averages are pulled down by the wet western corridors where most residents live.\n\nThe cloudiest states are not all in the Pacific Northwest, though. **West Virginia** logs just 60 sunny days, one of the lowest counts in the country. **Ohio** manages only 72. Both are affected by moisture from the Great Lakes and persistent winter overcast. The Northeast averages just 85.7 sunny days per year, compared to 116.8 in the West, a gap of more than a month of blue sky.\n```","order":3,"faqs":[]},{"tocTitle":"Energy vs. Clear Skies","contentTitle":"Total Energy and Clear Skies Measure Different Things","content":"```\nSolar energy and sunny days track closely, but they are not measuring the same thing. A state can receive massive total radiation without many picture-perfect clear days, or it can log plenty of clear skies without topping the energy rankings.\n\n{{scatter:0,1|title=Total Solar Energy and Clear Days Track Closely, but Not Perfectly|subtitle=States in the desert Southwest dominate both metrics, while Florida gets far more solar energy than its clear-day count would suggest.}}\n\n**Colorado** is the clearest example of how the metrics diverge from temperature. It ranks 6th in both sunlight (4,960 kJ/m²) and sunny days (136), but its average temperature is just 47.6°F, ranking 40th out of 50 states. Colorado's high elevation gives it thin, dry air that lets solar radiation pour through with minimal atmospheric filtering, even while winter temperatures plunge. **Nevada** shows the same pattern: 3rd in sunlight, 3rd in sunny days, but just 27th in average temperature at 52.7°F.\n\nThe weak relationship between sunshine and temperature is visible in the regional averages. The South is the warmest region by far, averaging 63°F, but it ranks second to the West in both sunlight and sunny days. Southern states like **Alabama** (99 sunny days) and **Kentucky** (93) are warm and humid, not warm and sunny. Their cloud cover comes from Gulf moisture, not mountains, but the effect on clear-day counts is the same.\n\nFor anyone choosing where to live, the distinction matters. If the goal is vitamin D and blue sky overhead, the desert Southwest wins by a wide margin. If the goal is warm weather, the Deep South delivers the heat: **Florida** leads the country at 73°F, more than **44 degrees** warmer than Alaska's 28.9°F. But only Arizona gives you both: abundant sunshine, clear skies, and one of the warmest winters in the country.\n```","order":4,"faqs":[]}],"metrics":[{"name":"Average Annual Sunlight","shortName":"Average Annual Sunlight","context":"The Annual Sunlight the region receives in kJ/m²","type":"Ranking","inverted":false,"mapColorScheme":"redBlue","mapInterpolation":null,"colorOverwrite":null,"summary":null,"measurement":{"id":"rec3r7fXBz3UwPeZU","name":"Kilojoule per Square Meter","symbol":"kJ/m²","showMap":false,"showText":true},"dataset":[{"id":"recCZ7a0773Z2tyvh","year":2019,"sources":[{"name":"Sunniest states in the U.S.","link":"https://stacker.com/stories/health/sunniest-states-us","lastUpdated":"May 6, 2019","organization":{"name":"Stacker","url":"https://stacker.com/"}}],"summary":{"label":"National Average","value":"4,410 kJ/m²"},"mapLinkUrl":"https://datawrapper.dwcdn.net/FMmMK/embed.js","mapMinHeight":250,"editorialNote":null,"data":[{"data":5755,"viewData":"5,755 kJ/m²","regionIndex":0,"regionName":"Arizona"},{"data":5642,"viewData":"5,642 kJ/m²","regionIndex":1,"regionName":"New Mexico"},{"data":5296,"viewData":"5,296 kJ/m²","regionIndex":2,"regionName":"Nevada"},{"data":5137,"viewData":"5,137 kJ/m²","regionIndex":3,"regionName":"Texas"},{"data":5050,"viewData":"5,050 kJ/m²","regionIndex":4,"regionName":"California"},{"data":4960,"viewData":"4,960 kJ/m²","regionIndex":5,"regionName":"Colorado"},{"data":4912,"viewData":"4,912 kJ/m²","regionIndex":6,"regionName":"Oklahoma"},{"data":4890,"viewData":"4,890 kJ/m²","regionIndex":7,"regionName":"Kansas"},{"data":4887,"viewData":"4,887 kJ/m²","regionIndex":8,"regionName":"Utah"},{"data":4859,"viewData":"4,859 kJ/m²","regionIndex":9,"regionName":"Florida"},{"data":4725,"viewData":"4,725 kJ/m²","regionIndex":10,"regionName":"Louisiana"},{"data":4725,"viewData":"4,725 kJ/m²","regionIndex":11,"regionName":"Arkansas"},{"data":4693,"viewData":"4,693 kJ/m²","regionIndex":12,"regionName":"Mississippi"},{"data":4685,"viewData":"4,685 kJ/m²","regionIndex":13,"regionName":"Nebraska"},{"data":4661,"viewData":"4,661 kJ/m²","regionIndex":14,"regionName":"Georgia"},{"data":4660,"viewData":"4,660 kJ/m²","regionIndex":15,"regionName":"Alabama"},{"data":4624,"viewData":"4,624 kJ/m²","regionIndex":16,"regionName":"South Carolina"},{"data":4545,"viewData":"4,545 kJ/m²","regionIndex":17,"regionName":"Missouri"},{"data":4486,"viewData":"4,486 kJ/m²","regionIndex":18,"regionName":"Tennessee"},{"data":4471,"viewData":"4,471 kJ/m²","regionIndex":19,"regionName":"Wyoming"},{"data":4466,"viewData":"4,466 kJ/m²","regionIndex":20,"regionName":"North Carolina"},{"data":4383,"viewData":"4,383 kJ/m²","regionIndex":21,"regionName":"Kentucky"},{"data":4380,"viewData":"4,380 kJ/m²","regionIndex":22,"regionName":"Illinois"},{"data":4354,"viewData":"4,354 kJ/m²","regionIndex":23,"regionName":"Virginia"},{"data":4332,"viewData":"4,332 kJ/m²","regionIndex":24,"regionName":"South Dakota"},{"data":4331,"viewData":"4,331 kJ/m²","regionIndex":25,"regionName":"Iowa"},{"data":4318,"viewData":"4,318 kJ/m²","regionIndex":26,"regionName":"Indiana"},{"data":4267,"viewData":"4,267 kJ/m²","regionIndex":27,"regionName":"Maryland"},{"data":4251,"viewData":"4,251 kJ/m²","regionIndex":28,"regionName":"Idaho"},{"data":4232,"viewData":"4,232 kJ/m²","regionIndex":29,"regionName":"Delaware"},{"data":4146,"viewData":"4,146 kJ/m²","regionIndex":30,"regionName":"West Virginia"},{"data":4139,"viewData":"4,139 kJ/m²","regionIndex":31,"regionName":"Ohio"},{"data":4056,"viewData":"4,056 kJ/m²","regionIndex":32,"regionName":"New Jersey"},{"data":4023,"viewData":"4,023 kJ/m²","regionIndex":33,"regionName":"Wisconsin"},{"data":4018,"viewData":"4,018 kJ/m²","regionIndex":34,"regionName":"Michigan"},{"data":3989,"viewData":"3,989 kJ/m²","regionIndex":35,"regionName":"Rhode Island"},{"data":3988,"viewData":"3,988 kJ/m²","regionIndex":36,"regionName":"Connecticut"},{"data":3968,"viewData":"3,968 kJ/m²","regionIndex":37,"regionName":"Minnesota"},{"data":3944,"viewData":"3,944 kJ/m²","regionIndex":38,"regionName":"Massachusetts"},{"data":3939,"viewData":"3,939 kJ/m²","regionIndex":39,"regionName":"Pennsylvania"},{"data":3925,"viewData":"3,925 kJ/m²","regionIndex":40,"regionName":"North Dakota"},{"data":3904,"viewData":"3,904 kJ/m²","regionIndex":41,"regionName":"New York"},{"data":3891,"viewData":"3,891 kJ/m²","regionIndex":42,"regionName":"New Hampshire"},{"data":3847,"viewData":"3,847 kJ/m²","regionIndex":43,"regionName":"Montana"},{"data":3830,"viewData":"3,830 kJ/m²","regionIndex":44,"regionName":"Oregon"},{"data":3826,"viewData":"3,826 kJ/m²","regionIndex":45,"regionName":"Vermont"},{"data":3815,"viewData":"3,815 kJ/m²","regionIndex":46,"regionName":"Maine"},{"data":3467,"viewData":"3,467 kJ/m²","regionIndex":47,"regionName":"Washington"}]}]},{"name":"Number of Sunny Days","shortName":"# of Sunny Days","context":"Total count of days per year with clear or mostly sunny weather conditions.","type":"Choropleth","inverted":false,"mapColorScheme":"redBlue","mapInterpolation":"linear","colorOverwrite":"","summary":"average","measurement":null,"dataset":[{"id":"recpyKiD3m5BEUmcB","year":null,"sources":[],"summary":{"label":"National Average","value":"103"},"mapLinkUrl":"https://datawrapper.dwcdn.net/gLzxG/embed.js","mapMinHeight":250,"editorialNote":null,"data":[{"data":193,"viewData":"193","regionIndex":0,"regionName":"Arizona"},{"data":167,"viewData":"167","regionIndex":1,"regionName":"New Mexico"},{"data":158,"viewData":"158","regionIndex":2,"regionName":"Nevada"},{"data":146,"viewData":"146","regionIndex":4,"regionName":"California"},{"data":139,"viewData":"139","regionIndex":6,"regionName":"Oklahoma"},{"data":136,"viewData":"136","regionIndex":5,"regionName":"Colorado"},{"data":135,"viewData":"135","regionIndex":3,"regionName":"Texas"},{"data":128,"viewData":"128","regionIndex":7,"regionName":"Kansas"},{"data":125,"viewData":"125","regionIndex":8,"regionName":"Utah"},{"data":123,"viewData":"123","regionIndex":11,"regionName":"Arkansas"},{"data":120,"viewData":"120","regionIndex":28,"regionName":"Idaho"},{"data":117,"viewData":"117","regionIndex":13,"regionName":"Nebraska"},{"data":115,"viewData":"115","regionIndex":17,"regionName":"Missouri"},{"data":115,"viewData":"115","regionIndex":16,"regionName":"South Carolina"},{"data":114,"viewData":"114","regionIndex":19,"regionName":"Wyoming"},{"data":112,"viewData":"112","regionIndex":14,"regionName":"Georgia"},{"data":111,"viewData":"111","regionIndex":12,"regionName":"Mississippi"},{"data":109,"viewData":"109","regionIndex":20,"regionName":"North Carolina"},{"data":105,"viewData":"105","regionIndex":27,"regionName":"Maryland"},{"data":105,"viewData":"105","regionIndex":25,"regionName":"Iowa"},{"data":104,"viewData":"104","regionIndex":24,"regionName":"South Dakota"},{"data":102,"viewData":"102","regionIndex":18,"regionName":"Tennessee"},{"data":101,"viewData":"101","regionIndex":46,"regionName":"Maine"},{"data":101,"viewData":"101","regionIndex":9,"regionName":"Florida"},{"data":101,"viewData":"101","regionIndex":10,"regionName":"Louisiana"},{"data":100,"viewData":"100","regionIndex":23,"regionName":"Virginia"},{"data":99,"viewData":"99","regionIndex":15,"regionName":"Alabama"},{"data":98,"viewData":"98","regionIndex":38,"regionName":"Massachusetts"},{"data":98,"viewData":"98","regionIndex":35,"regionName":"Rhode Island"},{"data":97,"viewData":"97","regionIndex":29,"regionName":"Delaware"},{"data":95,"viewData":"95","regionIndex":37,"regionName":"Minnesota"},{"data":95,"viewData":"95","regionIndex":22,"regionName":"Illinois"},{"data":94,"viewData":"94","regionIndex":32,"regionName":"New Jersey"},{"data":93,"viewData":"93","regionIndex":40,"regionName":"North Dakota"},{"data":93,"viewData":"93","regionIndex":21,"regionName":"Kentucky"},{"data":90,"viewData":"90","regionIndex":48,"regionName":"Hawaii"},{"data":90,"viewData":"90","regionIndex":42,"regionName":"New Hampshire"},{"data":89,"viewData":"89","regionIndex":33,"regionName":"Wisconsin"},{"data":88,"viewData":"88","regionIndex":26,"regionName":"Indiana"},{"data":87,"viewData":"87","regionIndex":39,"regionName":"Pennsylvania"},{"data":82,"viewData":"82","regionIndex":43,"regionName":"Montana"},{"data":82,"viewData":"82","regionIndex":36,"regionName":"Connecticut"},{"data":72,"viewData":"72","regionIndex":31,"regionName":"Ohio"},{"data":71,"viewData":"71","regionIndex":34,"regionName":"Michigan"},{"data":68,"viewData":"68","regionIndex":44,"regionName":"Oregon"},{"data":63,"viewData":"63","regionIndex":41,"regionName":"New York"},{"data":61,"viewData":"61","regionIndex":49,"regionName":"Alaska"},{"data":60,"viewData":"60","regionIndex":30,"regionName":"West Virginia"},{"data":58,"viewData":"58","regionIndex":47,"regionName":"Washington"},{"data":58,"viewData":"58","regionIndex":45,"regionName":"Vermont"}]}]},{"name":"Average Temperature","shortName":"Average Temperature","context":"Average annual temperature.","type":"Choropleth","inverted":false,"mapColorScheme":"redBlue","mapInterpolation":"linear","colorOverwrite":"","summary":"average","measurement":{"id":"recP2749ZnVbxfuKC","name":"Fahrenheit","symbol":"°F","showMap":true,"showText":true},"dataset":[{"id":"recWxgf71RalrSv49","year":2024,"sources":[{"name":"Statewide Mapping","link":"https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/access/monitoring/climate-at-a-glance/statewide/mapping/110/tmax/202412/12/value","lastUpdated":"2024","organization":{"name":"National Centers for Environmental Information (NOAA)","url":"https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/"}}],"summary":{"label":null,"value":null},"mapLinkUrl":"https://datawrapper.dwcdn.net/lTIpo/embed.js","mapMinHeight":300,"editorialNote":null,"data":[{"data":73,"viewData":"73.0°F","regionIndex":9,"regionName":"Florida"},{"data":69.2,"viewData":"69.2°F","regionIndex":10,"regionName":"Louisiana"},{"data":68.6,"viewData":"68.6°F","regionIndex":3,"regionName":"Texas"},{"data":66.7,"viewData":"66.7°F","regionIndex":48,"regionName":"Hawaii"},{"data":66.6,"viewData":"66.6°F","regionIndex":12,"regionName":"Mississippi"},{"data":65.9,"viewData":"65.9°F","regionIndex":14,"regionName":"Georgia"},{"data":65.4,"viewData":"65.4°F","regionIndex":15,"regionName":"Alabama"},{"data":64.8,"viewData":"64.8°F","regionIndex":16,"regionName":"South Carolina"},{"data":63.3,"viewData":"63.3°F","regionIndex":11,"regionName":"Arkansas"},{"data":63.1,"viewData":"63.1°F","regionIndex":6,"regionName":"Oklahoma"},{"data":62.5,"viewData":"62.5°F","regionIndex":0,"regionName":"Arizona"},{"data":61.2,"viewData":"61.2°F","regionIndex":20,"regionName":"North Carolina"},{"data":60.6,"viewData":"60.6°F","regionIndex":18,"regionName":"Tennessee"},{"data":60.5,"viewData":"60.5°F","regionIndex":4,"regionName":"California"},{"data":58.8,"viewData":"58.8°F","regionIndex":21,"regionName":"Kentucky"},{"data":58,"viewData":"58.0°F","regionIndex":17,"regionName":"Missouri"},{"data":58,"viewData":"58.0°F","regionIndex":23,"regionName":"Virginia"},{"data":57.6,"viewData":"57.6°F","regionIndex":7,"regionName":"Kansas"},{"data":57.5,"viewData":"57.5°F","regionIndex":29,"regionName":"Delaware"},{"data":57.5,"viewData":"57.5°F","regionIndex":27,"regionName":"Maryland"},{"data":56.3,"viewData":"56.3°F","regionIndex":1,"regionName":"New Mexico"},{"data":55.7,"viewData":"55.7°F","regionIndex":32,"regionName":"New Jersey"},{"data":55.5,"viewData":"55.5°F","regionIndex":22,"regionName":"Illinois"},{"data":55.2,"viewData":"55.2°F","regionIndex":26,"regionName":"Indiana"},{"data":55.1,"viewData":"55.1°F","regionIndex":30,"regionName":"West Virginia"},{"data":54.9,"viewData":"54.9°F","regionIndex":31,"regionName":"Ohio"},{"data":52.7,"viewData":"52.7°F","regionIndex":2,"regionName":"Nevada"},{"data":52.3,"viewData":"52.3°F","regionIndex":35,"regionName":"Rhode Island"},{"data":52.2,"viewData":"52.2°F","regionIndex":36,"regionName":"Connecticut"},{"data":52.1,"viewData":"52.1°F","regionIndex":39,"regionName":"Pennsylvania"},{"data":52,"viewData":"52.0°F","regionIndex":13,"regionName":"Nebraska"},{"data":51.5,"viewData":"51.5°F","regionIndex":25,"regionName":"Iowa"},{"data":51.2,"viewData":"51.2°F","regionIndex":8,"regionName":"Utah"},{"data":51.2,"viewData":"51.2°F","regionIndex":38,"regionName":"Massachusetts"},{"data":49.1,"viewData":"49.1°F","regionIndex":44,"regionName":"Oregon"},{"data":49,"viewData":"49.0°F","regionIndex":41,"regionName":"New York"},{"data":48.9,"viewData":"48.9°F","regionIndex":34,"regionName":"Michigan"},{"data":48.4,"viewData":"48.4°F","regionIndex":47,"regionName":"Washington"},{"data":48.3,"viewData":"48.3°F","regionIndex":24,"regionName":"South Dakota"},{"data":47.6,"viewData":"47.6°F","regionIndex":5,"regionName":"Colorado"},{"data":47.6,"viewData":"47.6°F","regionIndex":33,"regionName":"Wisconsin"},{"data":47,"viewData":"47.0°F","regionIndex":42,"regionName":"New Hampshire"},{"data":46.3,"viewData":"46.3°F","regionIndex":45,"regionName":"Vermont"},{"data":45.5,"viewData":"45.5°F","regionIndex":37,"regionName":"Minnesota"},{"data":45.5,"viewData":"45.5°F","regionIndex":28,"regionName":"Idaho"},{"data":45,"viewData":"45.0°F","regionIndex":46,"regionName":"Maine"},{"data":44.5,"viewData":"44.5°F","regionIndex":43,"regionName":"Montana"},{"data":44.3,"viewData":"44.3°F","regionIndex":19,"regionName":"Wyoming"},{"data":43.7,"viewData":"43.7°F","regionIndex":40,"regionName":"North Dakota"},{"data":28.9,"viewData":"28.9°F","regionIndex":49,"regionName":"Alaska"}]}]}],"author":null}