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The objective of this article is to analyze the impacts of climatic, physiographic, and land use/cover factors on the spatiotemporal variability of 7-day low-flow occurrence dates for 17 rivers during the period 1950–2023 in winter and summer in southern Quebec. Regarding spatial variability, correlation analysis revealed that these occurrence dates are primarily negatively correlated with agricultural surface area (early occurrence) during both seasons. In winter, they are also negatively correlated with total rainfall and daily mean maximum temperatures, but positively correlated with forest area and mean watershed slopes. Regarding temporal variability, the application of three Mann–Kendall tests showed that in summer, 7-day low flows tend to occur late in the season due to increased rainfall, particularly in the most agricultural watersheds. In contrast, in winter, very few significant changes were observed in the long-term trend of the analyzed hydrological series. Correlation analysis using redundancy analysis between eight climate indices and the occurrence dates of 7-day low flows showed that in summer, these dates are positively correlated with the global warming climate index, while they are not correlated with any climate index in winter. This study demonstrated that the spatiotemporal variability of the occurrence dates and magnitude of 7-day low flows are not influenced by the same factors in southern Quebec, except for the global warming climate index in summer. Finally, this study shows that the timing is much less sensitive to changes in climate change than the magnitude of low flows in southern Quebec.