In response to the development of a new higher-resolution sea surface temperature (SST) analysis at the National Meteorological Center (NMC), a new monthly 1° global sea surface temperature climatology was constructed from two intermediate climatologies: the 2° SST climatology presently used at NMC and a 1° SST climatology derived from the new analysis. The 2° SST climatology used a 30-yr 1950–1979 base period between roughly 40°S and 60°N based on in situ (ship and buoy) SST data supplemented by four years (1982–1985) of satellite SST retrievals. The 1° SST climatology was based on monthly analyses using in situ SST data, satellite SST retrievals, and sea-ice coverage data over a 12-yr period (1982–1993). The final climatology was combined from these two products so that a 1° resolution was maintained and the base period was adjusted to the 1950–1979 period wherever possible (approximately between 40°S and 60°N). Compared to the 2° climatology, the 1° climatology resolves equatorial upwelling and fronts much better. This leads to a better matching of the scales of the new analysis and climatology. In addition, because the magnitudes of large-scale features are consistently maintained in both the older 2° and the new 1° climatologies, climate monitoring of large-scale anomalies will be minimally affected by the analysis change. The use of 12 years of satellite SST retrievals makes this new climatology useful for many additional purposes because its effective resolution actually approaches 1° everywhere over the global ocean and because the mean SST values are more accurate south of 40°S than climatologies without these data.