The weatherman has warned of "very heavy" rains in Assam, which is battling floods, Meghalaya and heavy rains in West Bengal, Sikkim, Bihar, Arunachal Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh and coastal Karnataka.
Heavy rains lashed the national capital, bringing down the maximum temperature, which was recorded at 32.9 degrees Celsius.
The Safdarjung observatory recorded 21 mm of rains. The minimum temperature in the city settled at 25 degrees Celsius, while humidity shot up to 100 per cent.
Heavy rains pounded Bharatpur, Dholpur, Karauli districts inundating several areas, from where hundreds of people have been shifted to shelters.
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Rajasthan has received excess rainfall so far this season. Against a normal rainfall of 149.85 mm from June 1 to July 17, the state gauged 222.99 mm of precipitation. Despite this, Jaisalmer, Jodhpur and Sirohi have had deficit rains while Barmer, Jalore and Sri Ganganagar have had scanty rainfall so far.
Of the 822 dams in Rajasthan, 36 were fully filled and 391 were partially filled, while 395 are empty, according to water resources department.
Heavy to very heavy rains hit Badaun that gauged 20 cm of rains, Kasganj 19, Najibabad 18, Nagina 16, Chhatta 14, Powayan 13, Kiroli 12 cm each of rainfall.
Uttarakhand reported two more rain-related deaths though there were signs of a let-up in monsoon activity in most parts of the state, including Dehradun.
A person was killed in Uttarkashi when the car he was driving fell into a swollen Bhagirathi river after being hit by a boulder rolling down a hillside due to landslip.A child was swept away by flood waters in Badhedi Rajputana village of Haridwar district.
The current spell of heavy rains in Uttarakhand has also affected the Chardham yatra with the highways leading to the Himalayan shrines of Badrinath and Kedarnath still blocked.