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Abstract Using the Hubble Space Telescope, Saturn was observed in 2018, 2019, and 2020, just after the northern hemisphere summer solstice. Analysis of multispectral imaging data reveals three years of cloud changes associated with a 70° N storm that began in 2018. Additionally, there is an increase in equatorial brightness and perhaps haze optical depth at 0° to 7° N. There are small midsummer changes at the north pole, with a thin blue feature near the polar hexagon’s outer edge disappearing between 2019 and 2020 and increasingly reddish polar haze. Zonal winds at most latitudes remain close to values obtained by the Cassini mission with a slight increase of winds in the equatorial zone. Yearly cloud changes, while noticeable, are small compared with the changes observed between the Voyager (northern spring) and Cassini (southern summer to northern spring) eras, but further observations will provide a longer baseline for comparison.