Nature Office has issued various surge admonitions and alarms are set up over the West Midlands.
Met Office golden climate alerts of rain and electrical storms are set up this evening for East Anglia, London and the South East and the South West.
The South East could likewise encounter the most sultry day of the year up until now.
Met Office meteorologist Craig Snell said temperatures could hit highs of 28C or 29C in the locale.
He stated: "Everything depends how much cloud creates. There's a possibility we could see the hottest day of the year."
West Midlands Police said a few streets in Birmingham were as yet influenced by flooding and prompted drivers not to overlook street conclusion signs.
One noteworthy course in the city was left blocked in light of water up to 5ft profound.
The Met Office said a site at Winterbourne, in Edgbaston, recorded 58mm of precipitation in only one hour on Sunday evening, and 81mm of every a 12-hour time frame.
The month to month normal for the West Midlands district in May is 55mm, Mr Snell said.
Be that as it may, he said the exuberant rain had been "exceptionally limited", calling attention to that another site 10 miles away at Coleshill recorded only 3mm of rain in 12 hours.
BBC columnist Rebecca Woods said she had driven past countless and shut streets in the Harborne and Selly Oak zones.
She said she had seen overflowed houses and it had taken her hour and a half to drive around five miles.
Neighboring Warwickshire Fire and Save Administration (WFRS) said it had likewise been "to a great degree caught up with" managing flooding approaches Sunday evening.
The earth Office has in excess of 20 surge admonitions and in excess of 40 surge alarms set up covering quite a bit of Focal Britain.
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