show temperatures are set to drop to a freezing -8C by Sunday.
The latest maps from WXCHARTS show a chilly couple of days headed for the UK next weekend.
Maps for Sunday, January 26, show that by 9pm, large swathes of the UK will see freezing , with some seeing as low as -8C.
Scotland is to be hit by the coldest temperatures but the north of England will also see chilly conditions.
The North West, in particular, will see temperatures of around -3C.
At 6pm on Sunday, a wind chill index map shows in England will range from 0C to around -7C.
Temperatures are expected to fall below or close to freezing
The purple patches on the map show where snow is set to fall on Sunday
Winter conditions are set to hit the UK again over the weekend
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The south of England and most parts of the Midlands will escape chilly temperatures sitting at around 5C.
There are also some predictions of snow for parts of England forecasted by WXCHARTS.
In England, up to 5cm of snow could fall in Manchester, parts of Wales and in the Lake District.
Up towards Scotland, some areas could see as much as 25cm of snowfall.
While this is the lowest will drop over the weekend, Saturday 25 will see cold weather too.
On Saturday at 9am, much of Scotland and parts of Northern England will again see temperatures of between 0 and -3C.
weather forecast says: “Wet and very windy on Friday as Storm Éowyn moves in. Sunshine and showers on Saturday.
The weekend will see temperatures as low as -8C
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“Mixture of clear and sunny spells on Sunday but winds picking up again later.”
This comes after snow caused disruption to the UK over January with many delays to flights, car journeys and train times due to the wintery conditions.
Hundreds of schools were also forced to shut due to icy conditions.
long-range forecast says: “This looks like being and unsettled period across much of the country, but especially for northern and western parts.
“During Sunday and into Monday, another deep area of low pressure looks likely to move across the UK from the Atlantic, bringing wet and windy conditions to most if not all parts.
“Further spells of wet and windy weather look like moving east from the Atlantic to affect the UK during the rest of the period too, with drier, brighter spells in between.
“There is the potential for further weather warnings or even a named storm at some point.
“Temperatures overall are likely to end up being around or slightly above average, though will make it feel chilly, and brief cool spells are likely between weather systems.”