The ITCZ and the Reversing Asian–Australian Monsoon
How the tropical rain belt migrates between hemispheres, creating opposite wet and dry seasons across Indo-China, the Maritime Continent and northern Australia.
1. What Makes the ITCZ Move?
The Intertropical Convergence Zone is a broad belt where tropical trade winds meet, air rises, clouds deepen and heavy rain develops. It follows the zone of strongest seasonal heating rather than remaining fixed on the geographic equator.
As the Sun’s most direct heating shifts north and south through the year, the warmest land–ocean zone, monsoon trough and main tropical rain belt shift with it.
2. Near the Equator: Two Rain Peaks
Equatorial Indonesia, Malaysia and nearby seas do not have a strong temperature winter. Their seasons are governed more by rainfall, wind direction and cloudiness.
Because the overhead Sun crosses equatorial latitudes twice each year, many places receive rainfall maxima around March–April and October–November.
Mountains, island coastlines and local sea breezes modify this ideal pattern. Southern Indonesia often has a clearer Australian-summer wet season and Australian-winter dry season.
↑ Back to top3. Northern Hemisphere Summer
Asia and Indo-China heat strongly. Continental low pressure deepens, the ITCZ shifts north, and moist cross-equatorial flow feeds the Asian southwest monsoon.
- Indo-China: wet southwest monsoon, usually beginning in May and strongest June–September.
- Northern Australia: dry season under subtropical high pressure and southeast trade winds.
- Southern Indonesia: often drier as the main rain belt sits farther north.
4. Southern Hemisphere Summer
Australia heats while continental Asia cools. The monsoon trough moves south through Indonesia and toward northern Australia.
- Northern Australia: humid buildup, monsoon bursts, tropical lows and cyclones.
- Indo-China: mainly dry northeast monsoon, especially inland.
- Maritime Continent: convection increases south of the equator.
5. Why Winds Turn at the Equator
The equator is not a wall. Air crosses it freely, but the Coriolis effect changes sign between hemispheres.
Northward crossing
Southeast trade winds cross the equator and become southwesterly, feeding India and Indo-China.
Southward crossing
Northeast trade winds cross the equator and become northwesterly, feeding the Australian monsoon.
↑ Back to top6. Monsoon Calendar at a Glance
Indo-China
Northern Australia
Southern Maritime Continent
Timing varies from year to year. ENSO, the Indian Ocean Dipole and the MJO can delay, weaken or intensify rainfall.
↑ Back to top7. Why Local Seasons Differ
The broad monsoon reversal is real, but geography creates major local differences.
- Central Vietnam: can be wet in the northeast monsoon because winds gain moisture over the South China Sea and rise over coastal mountains.
- Equatorial islands: sea breezes and mountains create frequent afternoon storms even outside the main monsoon peak.
- Monsoon breaks: a wet-season month can still contain several dry, sunny days.
8. The Seasonal Reversal in One View
Northern summer: the rain belt shifts toward Asia. Indo-China becomes wet while northern Australia enters its dry season.
Southern summer: the rain belt shifts toward Indonesia and northern Australia. Inland Indo-China becomes mainly dry.
North wet / south dry in June–August.
South wet / north dry in December–February.