Paw Safety Check

Is 32°C Too Hot to Walk Your Dog?

Paw Safety Check · Updated 23 June 2026

The short answer

At an air temperature of 32°C (90°F), it is dangerous on hard surfaces in the sun. Pavement can burn paws quickly and the risk of heat illness is high. Most dogs should not be exercised on pavement at this temperature during the day.

What 32°C means for the pavement

Your dog walks on the ground, not the air - and the gap is large. On a sunny day, dark asphalt at 32°C air can reach roughly 52°C (126°F)–62°C (144°F) in direct sun, while shaded surfaces stay closer to 37°C (99°F). Light concrete sits between the two, and grass stays near the air temperature. This is why timing and surface matter more than the headline number.

What to do at 32°C

Which dogs are most at risk

Flat-faced breeds, thick or dark-coated dogs, puppies, seniors, and overweight or unwell dogs feel heat sooner and harder. If your dog is in one of these groups, be more cautious than the general advice above - see which dogs are most at risk in heat and the signs of heatstroke.

Always confirm with the hand test

Temperature guides are a starting point, not the final word. Press the back of your hand on the pavement for 7 seconds: if you can’t hold it comfortably, it’s too hot for paws - choose grass, shade, or wait. See the full dog walking temperature chart.

Check your exact conditions. Air temperature is only part of the story - sun, wind and surface change everything. The free paw safety checker estimates the real pavement temperature for your location and shows the safe walking windows for today and the week.

Frequently asked questions

Is 32°C too hot to walk a dog?

At 32°C (90°F), it is dangerous on hard surfaces in the sun. Pavement can burn paws quickly and the risk of heat illness is high. Most dogs should not be exercised on pavement at this temperature during the day.

How hot is the pavement when it’s 32°C?

On a sunny day, dark asphalt can sit roughly 52°C (126°F)–62°C (144°F) - well above the air. In shade it’s closer to 37°C (99°F). Always confirm with the 7-second hand test.

What’s the safest way to walk a dog at 32°C?

Walk in the early morning or evening, stick to grass and shade, keep it short, bring water, and do the hand test before stepping onto any pavement.

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