The influence of aqueous subphase temperature on the formation and stability of floating layers of 5-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-10,15,20-tris(4-hexadecyloxyphenyl)porphyrin (P-OH) was investigated using the Langmuir technology. It was found that the increase in the subphase temperature from 1 to 40 °C leads to a loosening of floating layers (an increase in the area per molecule in the floating layer by ∼15% and a decrease in the surface compression modulus by more than two times). The stability of floating layers (i.e., the ability of a floating layer to maintain its area under the action of a constant compressive force) decreases with increasing subphase temperature. It has been shown that the most stable floating layers are formed at subphase temperatures lower than 30 °C. Monolayer films on solid substrates were obtained using the Langmuir-Schafer technique at subphase temperatures of 1, 10, 20, 30, and 40 °C. The surface relief of these films was studied by atomic force microscopy (AFM). The AFM analysis revealed that the films transferred from the aqueous subphase at a temperature of 20 °C had the highest continuity and the lowest roughness. The absorption spectra of the floating layers were obtained, in which a bathochromic shift of the Soret band and Q-bands were registered (by 19 nm at 20 °C) in comparison with chloroform solution spectrum. This shift is a consequence of the strong intermolecular π–π* interaction, resulting in the formation of J-type aggregates. The Soret band in the spectra of the floating layers shifted from 436 to 441 nm with an increase in subphase temperature from 1 to 40 °C. In the absorption spectra of thin films (8 transfers), the indicated shifts of absorption bands as well as a broadening of the Soret band are preserved. The results of this work can be used in the targeted creation of film samples with specific structure and properties.