


Quantitative Precipitation Forecast
Issued by NWS
Issued by NWS
755 FOUS11 KWBC 130745 QPFHSD Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 345 AM EDT Mon Oct 13 2025 Valid 12Z Mon Oct 13 2025 - 12Z Thu Oct 16 2025 ...California & Central Nevada... Days 1-2... ...First significant snowfall event of the season set to impact parts of the Sierra Nevada beginning Monday night... An upper low dropping southward along the West Coast is forecast to deepen into a robust 500mb closed low off the California coast by Monday night before swinging inland across central California on Tuesday and eventually the central Great Basin on Wednesday. This rapid amplification of the 500mb closed low (18Z ECMWF shows 500mb heights below the 0.5 climatological percentile and nearing October records off the California coast Tuesday morning) is due to an impressive anti- cyclonic wave break over British Columbia. Height falls and modest 500-700mb CAA aloft will support lowering snow levels down to around 6000-6500ft through the Siskiyou and the Sierra Nevada starting today and continuing through early Wednesday, with snow levels remaining around 7,000ft to start in the southern Sierra within the more robust precipitation axis. A healthy IVT topping 400 kg/m/s is helping to direct a rich plume of Pacific moisture at the mountain ranges. However, recent model trends over the last 24 hrs have indicated a slightly further south location of the upper- low, which lowers the QPF somewhat across the central Sierra due to less orthogonal (more southerly) flow into the Sierra Nevada terrain. This produces better upslope flow into the southern CA ranges (ptype primarily rain) and southern Sierra Nevada versus the prior forecasts centered on the central Sierra. Regardless, snow still arrives over the northern California mountains today with the heaviest snowfall occurring late tonight into Tuesday over the central/southern Sierra Nevada. Given the lack of deep, cold air aloft, snow is likely to be a heavy/wet snowfall along the Sierra. This raises concerns for potential impacts to trees and infrastructure given this is the first significant mountain snowfall in the Sierra Nevada this season. WPC`s Snowband Probability Tracker shows HREF guidance identifying 2-3"/hr rates over the southern/central Sierra Nevada Monday night into Tuesday. Look for some heavy snowfall to spill into central Nevada`s taller ranges with anywhere from 12-24" of snowfall possible over 8,000ft. WPC probabilities show moderate-to-high chances (50-80%) for at least 24" of snowfall throughout the central Sierra Nevada (above 8,000 feet) through Wednesday with maximum amounts up to 36" possible. Latest WSSI-P shows moderate-to-high chances (50-80%) for Major Impacts along the central Sierra Nevada with the Snow Amount, Snow Load, and Snow Rate impacts being the main concerns for the first significant snow of the season. Current WSSI also highlights Major to Extreme Impacts, which would imply dangerous to impossible travel at times between Monday night and much of the day on Tuesday, including for many major passes. The probability of significant freezing rain across CONUS is less than 10 percent. Mullinax/Snell $$