Quantitative Precipitation Forecast
Issued by NWS
Issued by NWS
607 FOUS11 KWBC 300739 QPFHSD Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 239 AM EST Sun Nov 30 2025 Valid 12Z Sun Nov 30 2025 - 12Z Wed Dec 03 2025 ...Great Lakes to the Interior Northeast... Day 1... The major winter storm plaguing the Upper Midwest will wane as the parent shortwave de-amplifies into a positive tilt and becomes more embedded in the westerlies across Canada. This will cause a more rapid progression of the driving low pressure, leading to moderate continued snow accumulations across the Great Lakes, and expanding across the higher terrain of the interior Northeast. The surface low is progged to track from the L.P. of Michigan this morning into the Canadian Maritimes by Monday morning /end of D1/. This will result in two areas of additional snowfall accumulation. The first is expected across the Great Lakes as NW flow develops in the wake of the surface low. While brief deformation snow is likely as the low departs Michigan, most of the additional snowfall is likely to be of the lake effect snow (LES) variety as CAA strengthens across the lakes. 850mb temps falling to -10C or lower will support steep lapse rates and inversion depths rising to around 800mb to support at least a brief period of heavy LES with rates exceeding 1"/hr (40-60% chance from the HREF). The most likely belts of heavy LES D1 will be across the eastern U.P., the northern L.P., SW MI, and then east of Lake Ontario. In these areas, WPC probabilities are 50-70% for more than 4 inches, with locally as much as 8 inches east of Lake Ontario. The other area of heavy snow from this system will be across the higher terrain of Upstate NY and Northern New England. WAA expanding northward downstream of the surface low will spread into Canada, drawing a narrow column of moisture from the Gulf to cause expanding precipitation in New England. The WAA is impressive but transient, and regional forecast soundings suggest persistent mid- level dry air which will somewhat preclude precipitation rate intensity. Additionally, the cold high pressure over the region early will rapidly retreat east, leading to funneled southerly flow with no cold air entrenchment. This suggests that the heaviest snow will be confined only to the higher terrain of the Adirondacks, Greens, and Whites, where WPC probabilities are moderate (30-50%) for 4+ inches of snowfall. ...Central Rockies/Four Corners... Days 1-2... A closed 500mb low dropping out of the Interior Northwest will move progressively southeast today while opening into a positively tilted trough. The base of this feature will reach the Four Corners Monday morning before continuing to eject into the Central Plains, and the overlap of height falls with an amplifying jet streak will produce large scale ascent across the Central Rockies and Four Corners today. Available moisture is somewhat scarce (PWs only around 0.25" and around the 10th percentile according to NAEFS) but the impressive, albeit transient, deep layer lift will overcome that to produce a swath of heavy snowfall. Snow should begin across the Great Basin this morning, but intensify in response to better lift aided by upslope flow over the Wasatch/Uintas this afternoon, and then the CO Rockies/San Juans/Sangre de Cristos this evening and tonight. Snow should end early Monday morning. WPC probabilities suggest a high risk (>80% chance) of more than 6 inches across most of these mountain ranges, with snow levels generally 4000-5000 ft. ...Central Plains & Ozarks through the Northeast... Days 2-3... ...Widespread impactful snow and ice likely, but uncertainty with respect to timing and track remains... A complex evolution of mid-level features will create the first widespread winter precipitation event from the Ohio Valley into the Appalachians, Mid-Atlantic, and Northeast. However, uncertainty remains considerable at this time range and model guidance continues to feature a variety of solutions which will affect the accompanying impacts. This system will develop initially in response to a shortwave diving out of the Central Rockies Monday afternoon, and this feature is expected to become neutrally tilted as vorticity lobes swing through its base by the time it reaches the Ohio Valley Tuesday morning. Thereafter, the shortwave tracks rapidly east while maintaining its modest amplitude, exiting New England by 12Z Wednesday. The global guidance has come into much better agreement this morning with the progged evolution, maintaining a flatter and faster wave, and in general, this upper pattern does not conceptually support a widespread significant snowfall. However, there are caveats that may make this a bit more impressive than it would otherwise appear at 500mb. This is primarily due to the amplification and phasing of upper jet streaks: one amplifying downstream of the shortwave and a second subtropical jet streak emerging from Mexico. The interaction of this jet energy is progged to occur across the Mid-Mississippi Valley Monday night, with the strengthening result then arcing poleward through Tuesday to provide more impressive lift both through the RRQ and LFQ. The strengthening jet streak will provide sufficient upper ventilation, in conjunction with the mid-level height falls, to produce surface cyclogenesis along the Gulf Coast Tuesday morning, with this low then deepening as it tracks rapidly northeast to off the coast of the Carolinas and then towards the 40/70N benchmark. The SLP trends of the various ensemble camps have been for a faster solution with also some latitudinal gain, suggesting this will not be a heavy snow event for the I-95 corridor, which is supported by an unfavorable surface high position as well, but could still cause impactful wintry precipitation across a large area. As the synoptics intensify and the surface low moves east, increasing WAA on a 30-50 kts 850mb LLJ will spread northward leading to an expansion of precipitation. Where this interacts with the strengthening jet streak, a stripe of heavy banded precipitation is likely, which will fall as snow in many areas. The first band is expected Monday into Monday night from the Central Plains through the Ohio Valley where the ageostrophic response to the LFQ of the upper jet will help intensify 700-600mb fgen, crossing directly the deepening DGZ (SREF DGZ 50mb depth probabilities > 50%). This should produce a stripe of heavy snow rates from KS through the Ohio Valley, and although the band will be progressive, WPC probabilities indicate a moderate risk (50-70% chance) for at least 2 inches from central KS through eastern OH, with locally higher amounts of 4+ inches possible (10-30%) aided by fluffy SLRs. South of this band, increasing moist isentropic ascent atop the retreating cold air will result in an axis of freezing rain across the Ozarks where WPC probabilities are modest (10-30%) for at least 0.1" of ice accretion, highest in central AR. Then, during D3 /12Z Tue to 12Z Wed/ the moist isentropic ascent maximizes leading to widespread heavy precipitation along and ahead of the strengthening low pressure system. With the surface high retreating and a lack of mid-level confluence to lock in cold air, many areas of the Mid-Atlantic into the Northeast will begin as a brief period of mixed precip, but should quickly change to rain Tuesday morning, especially along and east of I-95. Inland, however, the strong WAA, especially in the 850-700mb layer, will result in front end heavy snow, most likely from Kentucky northeast into interior New England. There is still uncertainty into how far north the warm air will spread to cause changeover, but significant snow accumulations are likely as reflected by WPC probabilities that have increased, and now suggest a greater than 70% chance for 4+ inches of snow from the Poconos through Downeast Maine. Locally more than 8 inches is possible, most likely in the higher terrain of central New England. It is prudent to note that while most of the guidance does not support an I-95 snow event, the ECMWF AIFS ensemble, and even to some degree the EFI, suggest some heavier snow farther south than most of the other camps, which could bring more impactful weather to I-95 and is worth continuing to monitor. Finally, south of the heavy snow and across the terrain of the Southern and Central Appalachians, a period of light to moderate freezing rain is likely which could cause impactful ice accretions, especially in the higher terrain. Current WPC probabilities are as high as 30-50% for 0.1" of ice, with local amounts approaching 0.25" possible in the vicinity of the Blue Ridge of NC and VA. Key Messages remain in effect for this system and are linked below (Key Message #3) Weiss ...Winter Storm Key Messages are in effect. Please see current Key Messages below... https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/key_messages/LatestKeyMessage_3.png $$