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National Severe Weather Outlook for the next week

Here you'll find all available severe weather outlooks on one page.

Overview of the threat for the next few days

Tuesday, April 21
Wednesday, April 22
Thursday, April 23
Friday, April 24
Saturday, April 25
Sunday, April 26
Monday, April 27

Outlook for Tuesday, April 21

Outlook Summary

Thunderstorms are expected today over much of Texas, from Illinois into Ohio, and over portions of central California. Severe weather is not currently forecast.

Outlook Images

overview

tornado low

wind low

hail low

Detailed Outlook

SPC AC 210537

Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1237 AM CDT Tue Apr 21 2026

Valid 211200Z - 221200Z

NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST

### SUMMARY

Thunderstorms are expected today over much of Texas, from Illinois into Ohio, and over portions of central California. Severe weather is not currently forecast.

Synopsis

An upper ridge will move into the Plains as an upper trough moves inland over the West, with a strong cyclonic speed max moving across CA and into the Great Basin. Meanwhile, northwest flow aloft will extend from the Great Lakes into the Mid Atlantic. Farther south, a weakening disturbance will move out of TX and toward the lower MS Valley.

At the surface, high pressure will remain over much of the eastern states and across the Gulf Coast. Southerly winds across the Plains and around this high may support mid to upper 50s F dewpoints as far north as IA and IL by 00Z, while higher dewpoints remain relegated to southern TX. Here, scattered showers and thunderstorms will likely be ongoing early on Tuesday where weak elevated instability will remain.

IL/IN/OH

A surface trough is forecast to develop from Lower MI into southern WI and northern IL by late afternoon, beneath the northwest flow regime and with cool midlevel temperatures. Southwest surface winds and daytime heating should lead to 40s and 50s F dewpoints, with a relatively dry boundary layer overall. Models suggest at least isolated late day and evening thunderstorms will develop ahead of this trough, though instability levels are uncertain. Despite marginal dewpoints/moisture, the cool temperatures aloft may support a few cells capable of small hail from IL into IN by late afternoon. Wind gust potential is more uncertain and dependent on storm coverage/outflow production, with the dry boundary layer conditionally helping strong gust potential into the evening and perhaps overnight.

Central CA

Cold temperatures aloft north of the midlevel jet will support weak instability over parts of the central Valleys. Given early precipitation and clouds, as well as marginal low-level shear, severe storms appear unlikely. However, a few strong storms may occur late in the afternoon if sufficient heating occurs behind the early day rain. Small hail appears most probable with the strongest cells.

..Jewell.. 04/21/2026

CLICK TO GET WUUS01 PTSDY1 PRODUCT

NOTE: THE NEXT DAY 1 OUTLOOK IS SCHEDULED BY 1300Z

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Outlook for Wednesday, April 22

Outlook Summary

Severe thunderstorms capable of hail and gusty winds may develop during the late afternoon and evening on Wednesday across portions of the High Plains.

Outlook Images

overview

tornado low

wind 5%

hail 5%

Detailed Outlook

SPC AC 210553

Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1253 AM CDT Tue Apr 21 2026

Valid 221200Z - 231200Z

THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF THE HIGH PLAINS

### SUMMARY

Severe thunderstorms capable of hail and gusty winds may develop during the late afternoon and evening on Wednesday across portions of the High Plains.

Synopsis

A closed upper low across the western US will devolve into an open wave as it lifts northeast toward the northern Plains. At the same time, a surface low will gradually deepen as it moves across northern Montana east into North Dakota by Thursday morning.

Lee troughing will strengthen during the day with the approach of the western trough. The surface wind field within this lee trough will function to sharpen a dryline from the surface low south across much of the High Plains. To the east of the dryline, strengthening southerly winds will draw Gulf moisture northward into the strengthening cyclone. The quality of this moisture return remains a significant source of uncertainty regarding thunderstorm chances with northward extent.

Northern High Plains including areas of eastern Montana

By late afternoon increasing large-scale ascent, driven by modest height falls, will overspread northern portions of the dryline. Despite moisture concerns, isolated to scattered thunderstorms should develop across portions of the dryline during the afternoon. Large temperature/dewpoint spreads may support strong wind gusts with the strongest storms.

The best synoptic scale forcing for ascent will move across portions of eastern Montana during the late afternoon and evening. Should boundary layer moisture be richer than currently anticipated (e.g., closer to 40F than 25F), a threat for marginally severe wind gusts may materialize. This area will continued to be assessed in subsequent outlooks for an upgrade to Level 1/Marginal.

Southern High Plains

Midlevel height falls will not be as great here as compared to areas farther north. However, richer boundary layer moisture and strong dryline circulations aided by temperatures approaching 90F to the west of the dryline should support at least isolated thunderstorm development. Around 40 knots of cloud-layer shear should support at least a marginal hail risk with any storm that develops.

..Marsh.. 04/21/2026

CLICK TO GET WUUS02 PTSDY2 PRODUCT

NOTE: THE NEXT DAY 2 OUTLOOK IS SCHEDULED BY 1730Z

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Outlook for Thursday, April 23

Outlook Images

any severe 15%

Note on Medium Range Outlooks

You are looking at an outlook that is part of the medium range forecast (the outlook for days 4-8). The most important thing to note is that lack of a risk does not mean zero risk. Generally speaking, confidence has to be pretty high for the Storm Prediction Center to have an outlook area this far into the future.

When no specific risk areas are shown, you might see one of these phrases:

If you bookmark this page, it will continue to update with each new outlook that is issued.

Days Covered in this Outlook

Day 4 Thursday, April 23 15%
Day 5 Friday, April 24 15%
Day 6 Saturday, April 25 predictability too low
Day 7 Sunday, April 26 predictability too low
Day 8 Monday, April 27 predictability too low

Detailed Outlook

ZCZC SPCSWOD48 ALL ACUS48 KWNS 200858 SPC AC 200858

Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0358 AM CDT Mon Apr 20 2026

Valid 231200Z - 281200Z

DISCUSSION

In the days preceding this forecast period, a long-wave trough will develop across the western US. This feature will persist across the western and central US through the forecast period supporting a multi-day severe weather threat across portions of the central US.

On Thursday/Day-4, a lobe of vorticity will rotate around the closed midlevel low across the northern Rockies. This will reinforce a surface cyclone as it moves north into Canada. As this low moves north, a combined dryline/cold front will move east into an increasingly moist environment across the central Plains. The airmass ahead of the front should destabilize during the day Thursday, with MUCAPE values over 1000 J/kg possible into portions of Minnesota.

Thunderstorms should develop across portions of northeast Kansas into Iowa during the late afternoon as height falls overspread the surface front. These storms should quickly build southward along the front into portions of Oklahoma and southern Kansas. Kinematic fields initially should support supercells, but midlevel flow will increasingly become parallel to the front suggesting that storms will grow upscale into one or more linear segments.

The surface front, augmented by convective outflows, will continue to push south and east into the Southern Plains and the greater ArkLaTex region overnight Thursday into Friday/Day-5 before stalling out. Forecast soundings along and ahead of the frontal boundary indicate an unstable, uncapped environment with vertical shear between 30-40 knots should support additional severe thunderstorms Friday afternoon into the evening/overnight across portions of eastern Oklahoma and Arkansas.

By Saturday/Day-6, the larger-scale flow across the southern Plains will begin to respond to a low-latitude trough moving into southern California by once again becoming increasingly southwesterly. Embedded perturbations within this southwest flow ahead of the main trough will support an ongoing severe threat across the southern Plains. However, the location of various surface boundaries (dryline, outflow, frontal) will be predicated on the evolution of prior days of convection and the timing of the aforementioned perturbations in the midlevel flow. Thus, while pattern recognition suggests severe weather will be possible on Days 6,7, and 8, certainty as to the location of greatest severe potential on any given day remains too low to highlight with unconditional probabilities at this time.

..Marsh.. 04/20/2026

CLICK TO GET WUUS48 PTSD48 PRODUCT

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Outlook for Friday, April 24

Outlook Images

any severe 15%

Note on Medium Range Outlooks

You are looking at an outlook that is part of the medium range forecast (the outlook for days 4-8). The most important thing to note is that lack of a risk does not mean zero risk. Generally speaking, confidence has to be pretty high for the Storm Prediction Center to have an outlook area this far into the future.

When no specific risk areas are shown, you might see one of these phrases:

If you bookmark this page, it will continue to update with each new outlook that is issued.

Days Covered in this Outlook

Day 4 Thursday, April 23 15%
Day 5 Friday, April 24 15%
Day 6 Saturday, April 25 predictability too low
Day 7 Sunday, April 26 predictability too low
Day 8 Monday, April 27 predictability too low

Detailed Outlook

ZCZC SPCSWOD48 ALL ACUS48 KWNS 200858 SPC AC 200858

Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0358 AM CDT Mon Apr 20 2026

Valid 231200Z - 281200Z

DISCUSSION

In the days preceding this forecast period, a long-wave trough will develop across the western US. This feature will persist across the western and central US through the forecast period supporting a multi-day severe weather threat across portions of the central US.

On Thursday/Day-4, a lobe of vorticity will rotate around the closed midlevel low across the northern Rockies. This will reinforce a surface cyclone as it moves north into Canada. As this low moves north, a combined dryline/cold front will move east into an increasingly moist environment across the central Plains. The airmass ahead of the front should destabilize during the day Thursday, with MUCAPE values over 1000 J/kg possible into portions of Minnesota.

Thunderstorms should develop across portions of northeast Kansas into Iowa during the late afternoon as height falls overspread the surface front. These storms should quickly build southward along the front into portions of Oklahoma and southern Kansas. Kinematic fields initially should support supercells, but midlevel flow will increasingly become parallel to the front suggesting that storms will grow upscale into one or more linear segments.

The surface front, augmented by convective outflows, will continue to push south and east into the Southern Plains and the greater ArkLaTex region overnight Thursday into Friday/Day-5 before stalling out. Forecast soundings along and ahead of the frontal boundary indicate an unstable, uncapped environment with vertical shear between 30-40 knots should support additional severe thunderstorms Friday afternoon into the evening/overnight across portions of eastern Oklahoma and Arkansas.

By Saturday/Day-6, the larger-scale flow across the southern Plains will begin to respond to a low-latitude trough moving into southern California by once again becoming increasingly southwesterly. Embedded perturbations within this southwest flow ahead of the main trough will support an ongoing severe threat across the southern Plains. However, the location of various surface boundaries (dryline, outflow, frontal) will be predicated on the evolution of prior days of convection and the timing of the aforementioned perturbations in the midlevel flow. Thus, while pattern recognition suggests severe weather will be possible on Days 6,7, and 8, certainty as to the location of greatest severe potential on any given day remains too low to highlight with unconditional probabilities at this time.

..Marsh.. 04/20/2026

CLICK TO GET WUUS48 PTSD48 PRODUCT

← back to overview

 

Outlook for Saturday, April 25

Outlook Images

any severe predictability too low

Note on Medium Range Outlooks

You are looking at an outlook that is part of the medium range forecast (the outlook for days 4-8). The most important thing to note is that lack of a risk does not mean zero risk. Generally speaking, confidence has to be pretty high for the Storm Prediction Center to have an outlook area this far into the future.

When no specific risk areas are shown, you might see one of these phrases:

If you bookmark this page, it will continue to update with each new outlook that is issued.

Days Covered in this Outlook

Day 4 Thursday, April 23 15%
Day 5 Friday, April 24 15%
Day 6 Saturday, April 25 predictability too low
Day 7 Sunday, April 26 predictability too low
Day 8 Monday, April 27 predictability too low

Detailed Outlook

ZCZC SPCSWOD48 ALL ACUS48 KWNS 200858 SPC AC 200858

Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0358 AM CDT Mon Apr 20 2026

Valid 231200Z - 281200Z

DISCUSSION

In the days preceding this forecast period, a long-wave trough will develop across the western US. This feature will persist across the western and central US through the forecast period supporting a multi-day severe weather threat across portions of the central US.

On Thursday/Day-4, a lobe of vorticity will rotate around the closed midlevel low across the northern Rockies. This will reinforce a surface cyclone as it moves north into Canada. As this low moves north, a combined dryline/cold front will move east into an increasingly moist environment across the central Plains. The airmass ahead of the front should destabilize during the day Thursday, with MUCAPE values over 1000 J/kg possible into portions of Minnesota.

Thunderstorms should develop across portions of northeast Kansas into Iowa during the late afternoon as height falls overspread the surface front. These storms should quickly build southward along the front into portions of Oklahoma and southern Kansas. Kinematic fields initially should support supercells, but midlevel flow will increasingly become parallel to the front suggesting that storms will grow upscale into one or more linear segments.

The surface front, augmented by convective outflows, will continue to push south and east into the Southern Plains and the greater ArkLaTex region overnight Thursday into Friday/Day-5 before stalling out. Forecast soundings along and ahead of the frontal boundary indicate an unstable, uncapped environment with vertical shear between 30-40 knots should support additional severe thunderstorms Friday afternoon into the evening/overnight across portions of eastern Oklahoma and Arkansas.

By Saturday/Day-6, the larger-scale flow across the southern Plains will begin to respond to a low-latitude trough moving into southern California by once again becoming increasingly southwesterly. Embedded perturbations within this southwest flow ahead of the main trough will support an ongoing severe threat across the southern Plains. However, the location of various surface boundaries (dryline, outflow, frontal) will be predicated on the evolution of prior days of convection and the timing of the aforementioned perturbations in the midlevel flow. Thus, while pattern recognition suggests severe weather will be possible on Days 6,7, and 8, certainty as to the location of greatest severe potential on any given day remains too low to highlight with unconditional probabilities at this time.

..Marsh.. 04/20/2026

CLICK TO GET WUUS48 PTSD48 PRODUCT

← back to overview

 

Outlook for Sunday, April 26

Outlook Images

any severe predictability too low

Note on Medium Range Outlooks

You are looking at an outlook that is part of the medium range forecast (the outlook for days 4-8). The most important thing to note is that lack of a risk does not mean zero risk. Generally speaking, confidence has to be pretty high for the Storm Prediction Center to have an outlook area this far into the future.

When no specific risk areas are shown, you might see one of these phrases:

If you bookmark this page, it will continue to update with each new outlook that is issued.

Days Covered in this Outlook

Day 4 Thursday, April 23 15%
Day 5 Friday, April 24 15%
Day 6 Saturday, April 25 predictability too low
Day 7 Sunday, April 26 predictability too low
Day 8 Monday, April 27 predictability too low

Detailed Outlook

ZCZC SPCSWOD48 ALL ACUS48 KWNS 200858 SPC AC 200858

Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0358 AM CDT Mon Apr 20 2026

Valid 231200Z - 281200Z

DISCUSSION

In the days preceding this forecast period, a long-wave trough will develop across the western US. This feature will persist across the western and central US through the forecast period supporting a multi-day severe weather threat across portions of the central US.

On Thursday/Day-4, a lobe of vorticity will rotate around the closed midlevel low across the northern Rockies. This will reinforce a surface cyclone as it moves north into Canada. As this low moves north, a combined dryline/cold front will move east into an increasingly moist environment across the central Plains. The airmass ahead of the front should destabilize during the day Thursday, with MUCAPE values over 1000 J/kg possible into portions of Minnesota.

Thunderstorms should develop across portions of northeast Kansas into Iowa during the late afternoon as height falls overspread the surface front. These storms should quickly build southward along the front into portions of Oklahoma and southern Kansas. Kinematic fields initially should support supercells, but midlevel flow will increasingly become parallel to the front suggesting that storms will grow upscale into one or more linear segments.

The surface front, augmented by convective outflows, will continue to push south and east into the Southern Plains and the greater ArkLaTex region overnight Thursday into Friday/Day-5 before stalling out. Forecast soundings along and ahead of the frontal boundary indicate an unstable, uncapped environment with vertical shear between 30-40 knots should support additional severe thunderstorms Friday afternoon into the evening/overnight across portions of eastern Oklahoma and Arkansas.

By Saturday/Day-6, the larger-scale flow across the southern Plains will begin to respond to a low-latitude trough moving into southern California by once again becoming increasingly southwesterly. Embedded perturbations within this southwest flow ahead of the main trough will support an ongoing severe threat across the southern Plains. However, the location of various surface boundaries (dryline, outflow, frontal) will be predicated on the evolution of prior days of convection and the timing of the aforementioned perturbations in the midlevel flow. Thus, while pattern recognition suggests severe weather will be possible on Days 6,7, and 8, certainty as to the location of greatest severe potential on any given day remains too low to highlight with unconditional probabilities at this time.

..Marsh.. 04/20/2026

CLICK TO GET WUUS48 PTSD48 PRODUCT

← back to overview

 

Outlook for Monday, April 27

Outlook Images

any severe predictability too low

Note on Medium Range Outlooks

You are looking at an outlook that is part of the medium range forecast (the outlook for days 4-8). The most important thing to note is that lack of a risk does not mean zero risk. Generally speaking, confidence has to be pretty high for the Storm Prediction Center to have an outlook area this far into the future.

When no specific risk areas are shown, you might see one of these phrases:

If you bookmark this page, it will continue to update with each new outlook that is issued.

Days Covered in this Outlook

Day 4 Thursday, April 23 15%
Day 5 Friday, April 24 15%
Day 6 Saturday, April 25 predictability too low
Day 7 Sunday, April 26 predictability too low
Day 8 Monday, April 27 predictability too low

Detailed Outlook

ZCZC SPCSWOD48 ALL ACUS48 KWNS 200858 SPC AC 200858

Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0358 AM CDT Mon Apr 20 2026

Valid 231200Z - 281200Z

DISCUSSION

In the days preceding this forecast period, a long-wave trough will develop across the western US. This feature will persist across the western and central US through the forecast period supporting a multi-day severe weather threat across portions of the central US.

On Thursday/Day-4, a lobe of vorticity will rotate around the closed midlevel low across the northern Rockies. This will reinforce a surface cyclone as it moves north into Canada. As this low moves north, a combined dryline/cold front will move east into an increasingly moist environment across the central Plains. The airmass ahead of the front should destabilize during the day Thursday, with MUCAPE values over 1000 J/kg possible into portions of Minnesota.

Thunderstorms should develop across portions of northeast Kansas into Iowa during the late afternoon as height falls overspread the surface front. These storms should quickly build southward along the front into portions of Oklahoma and southern Kansas. Kinematic fields initially should support supercells, but midlevel flow will increasingly become parallel to the front suggesting that storms will grow upscale into one or more linear segments.

The surface front, augmented by convective outflows, will continue to push south and east into the Southern Plains and the greater ArkLaTex region overnight Thursday into Friday/Day-5 before stalling out. Forecast soundings along and ahead of the frontal boundary indicate an unstable, uncapped environment with vertical shear between 30-40 knots should support additional severe thunderstorms Friday afternoon into the evening/overnight across portions of eastern Oklahoma and Arkansas.

By Saturday/Day-6, the larger-scale flow across the southern Plains will begin to respond to a low-latitude trough moving into southern California by once again becoming increasingly southwesterly. Embedded perturbations within this southwest flow ahead of the main trough will support an ongoing severe threat across the southern Plains. However, the location of various surface boundaries (dryline, outflow, frontal) will be predicated on the evolution of prior days of convection and the timing of the aforementioned perturbations in the midlevel flow. Thus, while pattern recognition suggests severe weather will be possible on Days 6,7, and 8, certainty as to the location of greatest severe potential on any given day remains too low to highlight with unconditional probabilities at this time.

..Marsh.. 04/20/2026

CLICK TO GET WUUS48 PTSD48 PRODUCT

← back to overview

 

National Risk Overview

Tuesday, April 21
TORNADO: low
HAIL: low
WIND: low
Wednesday, April 22
TORNADO: low
HAIL: 5%
WIND: 5%
Thursday, April 23
ANY SEVERE: 15%
Friday, April 24
ANY SEVERE: 15%
Saturday, April 25
ANY SEVERE: predictability too low
Sunday, April 26
ANY SEVERE: predictability too low
Monday, April 27
ANY SEVERE: predictability too low

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