November 2021 was seventh-warmest, eighth-driest November on record for U.S.
According to the NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information climate summary for November 2021, the average temperature for the contiguous United States was 45.2° Fahrenheit, which is 3.5° F warmer than the 20th-century average. Based on records dating back to 1895, it was the seventh-warmest November on record.
Meanwhile, the total precipitation for November was 1.28 inches, which nearly one inch below average, making it the eighth-driest November in the 127-year period of record. The dry conditions were unusually wide spread; below-average precipitation occurred in part or all of 46 out of the Lower 48 states. Only Washington and Vermont were near or wetter than average.
Meanwhile, Alaska had a cooler-than-average November overall, with temperatures in the southwestern part of the state hitting new record lows that were 15 to 20 degrees F below the November average for their location. Despite the cold, November was dry in Alaska, especially in the western and southwestern parts of the state, which led to below-average snowpack across much of the area.
The low precipitation caused drought area in the contiguous United States to expand by more than 5% during November. Conditions worsened especially in the Piedmont of Virginia and North and South Carolina, across the Southern Plains of Colorado, Oklahoma, and Texas; and in southern Arkansas and northern Louisiana.
For more details on the November 2021 and fall climate, check out the full national summary from NOAA NCEI.