I used to ignore weather apps completely. I’d open them only when I absolutely had to, and glance at the forecast, most of the time feeling like they were all basically the same.
I used whatever came preinstalled on my phone. It displayed the temperature, maybe a basic forecast, and that was enough. Or at least, I thought it was.
Then I came across Weawow, and it changed what I expect from a weather app.
Now I find myself opening it without thinking, because it has become genuinely useful in planning my commute and deciding when to step out.
You notice the difference as soon as you open it

The first thing that stands out about the app is its appearance.
Weawow features real user-submitted photos that change based on current weather conditions. For instance, if it’s cloudy in your area, you’ll see a photo of a cloudy sky taken by someone else. If it’s raining, the background will reflect that as well.
The app has no ads interrupting the experience, which makes it feel more focused than most default weather apps that try to push additional content or clutter the screen.
It opens directly into a clean, visual forecast, so you don’t have to dig for information. You can easily check the temperature, humidity, pressure, UV index, and dew point.
Additionally, Weawow provides sunrise and sunset times, the golden hour, and phases of the moon, making it useful for planning parts of your day beyond just determining whether it will rain.
For those who want more visual detail, the app also includes a weather map and a globe view that display wind patterns and broader weather movements over time.
You get control that most weather apps don’t offer


With most default weather apps, you stay locked into a fixed layout. The information is available, but it is presented in the same format, leaving little room for customization.
With Weawow, the experience is different. You can tailor it to fit your personal approach to checking the weather. Instead of being confined to a single default view, you have the flexibility to choose what appears first and how to organize the information.
You can rearrange and customize the layout almost entirely. Whether you want a temperature and hourly forecast at the top or prefer wind speed and humidity upfront, you can customize it.
After I started modifying the layout, I realized how useful it is to prioritize the data you actually check. For me, that meant the current temperature, hourly forecast, and air quality stay at the top.


One of the biggest differences I noticed with Weawow is that the experience doesn’t stop inside the app; it extends into the widget itself.
Many weather apps provide a fixed widget with a predetermined layout, but this one allows you to customize its appearance and functionality.
In the widget settings (represented by a small cog icon), you can adjust nearly every aspect of the widget.
You can modify the font size based on the amount of information you want to see at a glance, choose the type of weather data displayed, and even set its update frequency. It ensures the information remains relevant without constantly refreshing in the background.
What truly sets this app apart is its design flexibility. You can switch weather icons, toggle display photos on or off, and even change the background color to match your home screen setup.
That level of control is exactly what makes it more usable in daily life. Instead of adapting to a fixed widget, you shape it around how you want to see information, which makes checking the weather feel faster and more natural.
The app allows you to select the source of your weather data


One of the most underrated features of Weawow is that it doesn’t restrict you to a single weather provider.
Many default weather apps make decisions on your behalf regarding the data source, forecasting model, and how conditions are interpreted, often without you even considering it.
With Weawow, the choice is yours. You can switch between different weather data providers based on what you trust or prefer. It means that the same location can be powered by various forecasting systems, each with its own strengths in accuracy, detail, or presentation.
You can choose from providers including NWS, DWD, Météo-France, MET Norway, AEMET, Xweather (AerisWeather), Apple Weather (Dark Sky), Weatherbit, OpenWeatherMap, and World Weather Online. Even providers like AccuWeather or Foreca are available with a small donation.
If one source’s forecasts seem too conservative or overly aggressive, you can easily try another.
Additionally, if you value short-term accuracy over long-range predictions, you have the flexibility to adjust your choice accordingly.
I tested 4 weather apps to replace Google Weather, and one is the clear winner
Looking for fair-weather (and otherwise) friends
A weather app I finally want to keep using
My default weather app always did the job, but it never felt like something I wanted to open.
Weawow changed that in small but noticeable ways. The moment I open it, the clean layout and absence of ads make it feel more focused. Instead of a one-size-fits-all experience, I can customize the widget design and data layout.
Additionally, having access to multiple weather data sources allows me to take control over what I’m looking at, rather than relying solely on a single default provider.



