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State Weather Policies > Indiana Weather Policies

Indiana State Weather Policies for IHSAA Schools (2026/2027)

Welcome to the Indiana Weather Policy Guide, a handy resource for understanding the Indiana High School Athletic Association (IHSAA) weather policies and recommended guidelines for athletics. We’ve made it simple: here’s the key information you need.

Abstract graphic of WBGT policy type vectors like heat, windspeed etc laid on top of a rising temperature graph

ihsa heat stress activity rules

What Are Indiana’s Heat Stress Activity Guidelines?

Indiana high school athletic programs follow WBGT-based heat stress guidelines approved by the IHSAA, IGHSAU, IHSMA, and IHSSA under the guidance of the IA Sports Medicine Advisory Committee.

WBGT is endorsed as the gold standard for measuring heat stress — accounting for ambient temperature, humidity, wind speed, sun angle, and cloud cover, making it significantly more accurate than heat index or local weather forecasts for outdoor athletic activity.

WBGT monitoring is recommended throughout the calendar year when ambient temperature exceeds 80°F, indoors or outdoors. Indiana falls under the Region 2 category.

Indiana high school athletic programs follow WBGT-based heat stress guidelines approved by the IHSAA, IGHSAU, IHSMA, and IHSSA under the guidance of the IA Sports Medicine Advisory Committee.

WBGT is endorsed as the gold standard for measuring heat stress — accounting for ambient temperature, humidity, wind speed, sun angle, and cloud cover, making it significantly more accurate than heat index or local weather forecasts for outdoor athletic activity.

WBGT monitoring is recommended throughout the calendar year when ambient temperature exceeds 80°F, indoors or outdoors. Indiana falls under the Region 2 category.

Use the table below to identify the current tier and its required practice restrictions.

Statewide

IHSAA Wet Bulb Globe Temperature Activity Guidelines

< 79.7°F

Normal Activities.

Three separate rest/water breaks of 3–5 min each per hour.

79.8° – 84.6°F

Use discretion for intense or prolonged practice. Three separate rest/water breaks of 4–6 min each per hour.

Monitor at-risk athletes closely. Cold water immersion must be available.

84.7° – 87.6°F

Maximum practice time is 2 hours. Reduce equipment to partial uniform. Remove all additional equipment if conditioning (football). If WBGT rises to this level during practice, players may continue in football pants.

Four separate rest/water breaks of 4–6 min each per hour. Monitor at-risk athletes closely. Cold water immersion must be available.

Contests: Implement additional/extended timeouts for rest/water breaks.

87.7° – 89.7°F

Maximum practice time is 1 hour. Reduce equipment to out of uniform. No conditioning. There must be 20 min of rest breaks distributed throughout the hour.

Monitor athletes closely. Cold water immersion must be available.

Contests: Consider moving start times earlier or postponing. Implement additional/extended timeouts for rest/water and shade.

> 89.7°F

No outdoor activities. Cancel or delay outdoor practices and contests until a lower WBGT is recorded.

Source: IHSAA Heat Chart. Participants should always have unrestricted access to water/fluids.

ihsaa heat stress policy requirements

What IHSAA Recommends Schools Have On-Site

Indiana’s guidelines are recommended best practices endorsed by four state associations. Schools are strongly encouraged to implement the following.

To keep students, youth and athletes safe, the following are required:

WBGT Monitor

Recommended when ambient temperature exceeds 80°F indoors or outdoors. Device must have a black globe and fan for accurate wind speed registration. Set up 15–20 min before activity, 3 feet off the ground in direct sun. Monitor throughout and modify immediately when WBGT moves into a new zone.

Cold-Water Immersion (CWI)

Required to be available at 79.8°F WBGT and above. Must be on-site and ready before activity begins — not just accessible nearby.

Unrestricted Water Access

Athletes must always have unrestricted access to water and fluids throughout all practices and contests. No exceptions.

At-Risk Athlete Monitoring

Athletes with pre-existing conditions (asthma, obesity, prior heat illness, sickle cell trait) must be closely monitored whenever WBGT is in the yellow zone or above.

Emergency Action Plan (EAP)

Each venue should have a site-specific EAP covering exertional heat emergencies including onsite cooling before transport.

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How Can Perry Weather Help?

Precise on-site WBGT monitoring

Meeting AAA heat stress requirements starts with accurate data. Perry Weather’s on-site WBGT and Heat Index monitoring tracks conditions continuously, so your staff always has the information they need to make the right call.

  • Set it and forget it.

    Perry Weather automatically monitors and records WBGT every 15 minutes – no tripods, no manual readings, no missed intervals.

  • More reliable than handheld devices.

    A large 3.5″ black bulb sensor delivers consistent, accurate readings free from shadows and calibration errors.

Automated heat stress policy based alerts

Your heat stress policy is only as good as your ability to communicate it in the moment. Perry Weather gives your staff the AAA policy framework, real-time alerts, and forecasting they need to make confident decisions all season long.

  • Your AAA heat stress policy, built in.

    Perry Weather helps you configure your state’s weather thresholds and instantly alerts your entire staff with clear action instructions the moment conditions require a change.

  • Plan ahead with WBGT forecasting.

    Get heat and WBGT risk updates based on your policies so you can adjust practice schedules before the day begins.

Historical WBGT data and compliance reporting

Perry Weather automatically logs every WBGT reading so you always have a complete picture of heat conditions across every practice, every session, all year long.

  • See exactly how long you were in each heat zone.

    Know how many times WBGT forced a modification or cancellation across the entire season.

  • Export logged WBGT data anytime.

    Pull records from any point in time for compliance review, incident documentation, or audits.

Heat Stress & WBGT FAQs

What is Wet Bulb Globe Temperature (WBGT)?

Wet Bulb Globe Temperature (WBGT) is a heat-stress index used to assess the risk of heat illness during outdoor and indoor activities. Unlike standard air temperature, WBGT incorporates the combined effects of air temperature, humidity, radiant heat (such as sunlight), and air movement to better estimate the environmental heat load on the human body.

Learn more about wet bulb globe temperature

What is the difference between the Wet Bulb Globe Temperature and the Heat Index?

While both are used to evaluate hot-weather conditions, the Heat Index only combines temperature and humidity. WBGT considers additional environmental factors that can affect heat stress, making it a preferred tool for sports, outdoor work, military training, and other activities where heat safety is a concern.

Read more about the differences between WBGT and the heat index here.

How does WBGT impact athletes?

Monitoring WBGT is essential for protecting athletes’ health and safety during outdoor practices, games, and events.

A higher WBGT reading leads to a greater risk of heat-related illnesses like heat stroke, heat exhaustion, and muscle cramps.

What is Heat Acclimatization?

Heat acclimatization is your body’s natural process of adapting to hot weather.

By gradually increasing your activity level and time spent in the heat over 1–2 weeks, your body becomes better at staying cool and handling hot conditions.

This helps reduce the risk of heat-related illness and can improve comfort and performance in the heat.

What is a Heat Illness?

Heat illness is a range of conditions that occur when the body can’t cool itself fast enough, from heat cramps and heat exhaustion to the most severe form, exertional heat stroke. It’s one of the leading causes of preventable death in high school athletes.

Classic heat illness is caused by environmental conditions such as high temperatures, humidity, direct sun, and low wind, all things that WBGT take in to account.

Heat Illness is typically preceded by Heat Stress – the strain placed on the body when it works to maintain a safe core temperature in hot conditions. Warning signs may be elevated heart rate, heavy sweating, and fatigue

What is exertional heat stroke?

Exertional heat stroke is the most severe form of heat illness and a medical emergency. It occurs when the body’s core temperature rises above 104°F due to intense physical activity.

Unlike classic heat stroke, which is driven purely by environmental conditions, exertional heat stroke is triggered by the body generating more internal heat than it can release during strenuous exercise.

Heat stroke prevention is often tied to real-time WBGT monitoring because it gives athletic trainers the data they need to modify activity before conditions become dangerous.

How can I measure the WBGT? What is the best way to measure the wet bulb globe temperature?

WBGT can be measured with a handheld device or a stationary on-site sensor. Handheld devices are portable but prone to shadows, calibration drift, and human error, and someone has to remember to take readings manually.

The gold standard is a stationary sensor with a 3.5″ black bulb, which automatically captures continuous readings and more accurately reflects the radiant heat your athletes are actually experiencing. For programs required to monitor WBGT at every practice, it eliminates the compliance risk that comes with manual methods.

Lightning Policy Guidelines

Lightning Safety Recommendations

The following lightning safety guidelines for Indiana are based on recommendations by the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS):

  • Assign staff to monitor local weather conditions before and during practices and contests.

  • Develop an evacuation plan, including identification of appropriate nearby safer areas and determine the amount of time needed to get everyone to a designated safer area.

  • When thunder is heard or lightning is seen*, the edge of the thunderstorm is close enough to strike your location. Suspend play for at least 30 minutes and vacate the outdoor activity to the designated safer location immediately.

  • Once play has been suspended, wait at least 30 minutes after the last thunder is heard or lightning is witnessed* prior to resuming play.

  • Any subsequent thunder or lightning* after the beginning of the 30-minute count will reset the clock and another 30-minute count should begin.

Signs of a Thunderstorm

How Can Perry Weather Help?

Instantly Tailor Alerts to Your Lightning Safety Policies

Perry Weather’s lightning detection and alerts system gives you clear, actionable instructions aligned with your lightning safety policies.

  • We’ll notify you as soon as lightning is detected with automated alerts. We guide you through immediate actions, keeping your athletes safe and practices on track.

  • Automatic alerts and real-time data for informed decision-making during critical weather events.

Know When It’s Safe to Resume Activities

Know exactly when it’s safe to step out after a lightning strike with Perry Weather’s lightning countdown timers.

  • When a lightning strike is detected nearby, Perry Weather initiates a countdown until given the all-clear and resuming outdoor activities.

  • The timer resets with each subsequent strike, ensuring adherence to lightning safety protocols before resuming activities

  • Stay a step ahead with advanced radar and predictive lightning risk management for confident event planning and adaptive scheduling.

Outdoor Warning System

Get custom PA alerts and audible alarms with our lightning warning system.

  • Instantly broadcast alerts and safety messages automatically across your campus – no matter the weather conditions.

  • Strobe lights, loud alarms, and text-to-speech make sure you won’t miss lightning alerts.

  • It works even during power outages, ensuring continuous safety without needing a direct power source.

Lightning FAQs

What do I do if lightning strikes?

  • Activate local Emergency Management Service.
  • If necessary, carefully move the victim to a safer location.
  • Assess airway, breathing, and circulation; initiate CPR if needed.
  • Check for and treat hypothermia, shock, fractures, and burns.

What do I NOT do if lightning strikes?

  • Do not shower, bathe, or use landline phones inside a safe shelter (cell phones are OK).
  • Avoid being the highest point in an open field, or near the tallest object.
  • Stay away from any open water.
  • Do not seek shelter under or near trees, flagpoles, or light poles.
  • Do not lie flat on the ground.

What is a Safe Shelter?

A safe shelter is any frequently inhabited building with four solid walls (not a dugout), electrical and telephone wiring, and plumbing, which aid in grounding the structure.

Where Do I Go When Lightning Approaches?

  • Designate a safe shelter for each venue.
  • All individuals have the right to leave an athletic site to seek a safe structure if they feel in danger of impending lightning.
  • As a secondary option, a fully enclosed vehicle with a metal roof and completely closed windows provides safety from lightning.
  • Do not touch any part of the vehicle’s metal framework during a thunderstorm.

Can a player who has been struck by lightning be safely touched by others?

Yes. Lightning victims do not carry a residual electrical charge. However, prioritize checking for injuries and call emergency services immediately.

Who is responsible for enforcing lightning safety protocols during practices or games?

Responsibilities may vary, but typically coaches, athletic trainers, and officials share the responsibility for monitoring weather conditions and enforcing safety procedures.

What if there are no readily available shelters nearby?

Some policies allow for designated “safe havens” under sturdy structures like bleachers (away from metal supports) or inside enclosed vehicles with the windows rolled up. However, this is a last resort.

Trusted by Schools Across The Country for Weather Policy Compliance

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Fairfield Sports Association
Purdue University Northwest
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