


Quantitative Precipitation Forecast
Issued by NWS
Issued by NWS
049 FOUS30 KWBC 240835 AAA QPFERD Excessive Rainfall Discussion...UPDATED NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 435 AM EDT Sun Aug 24 2025 Day 1 Valid 12Z Sun Aug 24 2025 - 12Z Mon Aug 25 2025 ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER THE SIERRA, SOUTHERN UTAH, AND THE WESTERN HIGH PLAINS... ...Intermountain West to the Central Plains... With the finer scale models maintaining and even bolstering their signal for enhanced rainfall amounts for the Sierra Nevada range eastward/northeastward...maintained the Slight Risk area with few modifications. In places...this rainfall will be in addition to some noteworthy rainfall amounts that fell on Saturday. With such anomalous moisture being pulled northwestward around the upper high/ridge axis...the expectation is that sufficiently high rainfall rates are possible that excessive rainfall is a concern across more the the intermountain region today compared with Saturday. Father east, the risk of excessive rainfall starts to spread out away from the Front Range of the central Rockies, and out over the adjacent Plains in a region of low level southerly flow drawing moisture northward while a broad area of surface high pressure at the surface and fast northwest flow aloft pushes a cold front south into parts of the central plains. This should set the stage for an MCS later tonight across parts of Colorado that spreads eastward and southward. The latest runs of the RRFS has been favoring heavier rain in southwest Kansas and portions of the Oklahoma and Texas panhandles...while the HREF has thrown in more with the coarser/global models in heavy to potentially excessive rainfall being confined to western Kansas. With the instability fields in the NAM and RRFS depicting 1000 to 2000 J per kg in better upslope flow closer to the Colorado state line...expanded the Slight Risk area southward and westward a bit. The presence/persistence of any low cloud cover that forms in the upslope flow will limit the surface heating and shift the focus for storms capable of producing heavy rainfall. ...Northern Mid-Atlantic and Pennsylvania/New York... A strong upper trough making its way eastward from the Ohio Valley and eastern Great Lakes should make it into Pennsylvania and New York state before slowing. The airmass its moving into will have 500 to 1000 J/kg of MLCAPE and precipitable water values generally in the 1.5 to 1.75 inch. With only modest low/mid level lapse rates...a few of any storms that form could produce locally heavy rainfall that results in localized flooding this afternoon or early evening before convection wanes with the loss of daytime heating. ...Coastal Carolinas... A weak surface feature in the vicinity of the coastline will focus and support locally heavy rainfall near the coastal portions of the Carolinas into tonight. Present indications are that the activity should remain off-shore. However...on-shore flow and the proximity of showers associated with the feature will keep the risk of some brief heavy rainfall along the immediate coast today. Any risk of excessive rainfall should taper off from south to north as the system continues to move northeast. ...Southern Georgia and northern Florida... On-shore flow of moist air interacting with the southern end of the front associated with the low pressure/amplifying upper trough to the north should combine to focus/support convection capable of producing heavy rainfall Monday and Monday evening across portions of southern Georgia into the northern Florida peninsula. Bann Day 2 Valid 12Z Mon Aug 25 2025 - 12Z Tue Aug 26 2025 ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL AREAS OVER PORTIONS OF THE CENTRAL ROCKIES FRONT RANGE AND THE SOUTHERN PLAINS ON MONDAY... Broad cyclonic flow aloft will be in place across the Plains on Monday while south to southeasterly low level flow continues to be drawn northward at low levels across the Southern Plains, with a boundary extending from northern Texas into northeast New Mexico and southern Colorado helping to focus another round of late day storms once an MCS weakens and dissipates in the morning. The airmass south of the front is expected to have PWs approaching 2 inches across the region and values potentially in the 2 to 2.25 inch range near the Red River. The overnight numerical guidance still supports the idea of two distinct regions of rainfall and saw little reason to make more than minor adjustments to the two Slight Risk areas from the previous outlook. Instability does not appear impressive at this point, but the atmosphere should support locally heavy rainfall should convection develop anywhere between Oklahoma/northern Texas westward into the plains of eastern Colorado and northeast New Mexico. The Slight Risk areas were embedded within a broader Marginal Risk area extending across much of the central and southern portion of the Great Basin and eastward to the central and southern Rockies Front Range. Once again...weak shortwave energy embedded within a broad upper leads to yet another round of late day showers and thunderstorms. Slot canyons...normally dry washes and burn scars remain most at risk for flooding. Bann Day 3 Valid 12Z Tue Aug 26 2025 - 12Z Wed Aug 27 2025 ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN ROCKIES AS WELL AS ADJACENT PLAINS... With a sprawling upper ridge in place...the potential exists for excessive rainfall will exist as anomalously deep moisture provides an environment supportive of brief but locally intense rainfall rates from any daytime or evening storms that form. The numerical guidance showed a more coherent signal for organized heavy rainfall from southern Colorado into northern New Mexico where low level flow is transporting moisture upslope and instability peaks at around 1000 J per kg in the late day with shortwave energy moving north-/northeastward across western New Mexico. Bann Day 1 threat area: https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/94epoints.txt Day 2 threat area: https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/98epoints.txt Day 3 threat area: https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/99epoints.txt