Temperatures fell as low as minus 11C overnight as the UK’s cold snap continued.
According to the Met Office, the frigid temperature was recorded at Loch Glascarnoch in the Scottish Highlands, with the mercury dipping below minus 7C across much of the country.
Temperatures were slightly milder in England and Wales, with lows of minus 6C at Trawsgoed in Ceredigion, Wales and minus 4C at Rostherne, Cheshire.
Forecaster Simon Partridge said the chill stemmed primarily from “a little ridge of high pressure moving across the UK overnight”, adding “the main difference between that and previous nights is the winds are a lot lighter”.
Mr Partridge said that much of the country will see frost in the morning but that later in the day there is expected to be widespread sunshine.
He said: “Friday is really the end of the really cold weather as things turn back to average by the time we get into the weekend.”
Thursday was cold again for all, with snow in places ❄️
Here are the numbers…👇 pic.twitter.com/YZS32JxMk1
— Met Office (@metoffice) November 21, 2025
It comes after hundreds of schools were forced to close, roads were disrupted and homes were left without power because of snow.
About 100 schools closed in northern Scotland on Thursday, while in Wales, 36 were closed in Pembrokeshire, 14 in Carmarthenshire and seven in Ceredigion.
In North Yorkshire, 33 schools were closed while eight were listed as fully closed in East Yorkshire.
The Met Office has a spate of yellow ice warnings in place across the UK on Friday morning, including north, east, south-east and south-west England, northern and south-eastern areas of Scotland and north and west Wales.
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