textproduct: Kansas City/Pleasant Hill
This forecast discussion was created in the public domain by the National Weather Service. It can be found in its original form here.
KEY MESSAGES
* Hazardous heat continues. Heat indices in the 100-105 F range are expected through Friday. An Extreme Heat Warning Remains in effect until Friday evening.
* Low chances (~20-30%) for showers and storms through the end of the week, mainly across north and northwest Missouri in the evening and overnight hours.
* Scattered storms possible (40-50% chance) Saturday, July 4th, in the afternoon and evening. There is a Marginal Risk (Level 1 of 5) of severe weather.
* Off-and-on rain chances (20-30%) continue into early next week with slightly cooler temperatures (low 90s) and lower heat indices (95-100 F).
DISCUSSION
Issued at 323 AM CDT Thu Jul 2 2026
Ridge influence will remain the status quo for at least another couple of days while the upper-level trough in the West attempts to suppress the oppressive heat regime in the central and eastern portions of the CONUS. Guidance points to a collapse of this ridge over the weekend following a series of shortwaves ejected by the western trough. Zonal flow will return for a number of days, and while the precise number of days is unclear, the expectation is for ridging to rebuild over the Four Corners around midweek next week.
The Extreme Heat Warning will remain in effect through Friday evening. While heat indices have likely topped out already, confidence remains high in widespread 100-105 heat indices and poor overnight recovery with minimum heat indices in or near the 75-85 F range. EFI continues to show that the ongoing heat event is unusual compared to reforecast climatology. The latest ENF forecast for 24- hour mean temperature on July 2, for example, produced an EFI of 56% (previous runs for the same date had EFIs between 52-61%). Per EFI, we are indeed in the midst of an anomalous heat event. As we move past the weekend, we'll begin to fall out of the "unusual" category. That said, it will still be toasty (temperatures in the low 90s and heat indices in the 95-100 F range).
Precipitation chances also gradually increase as we turn our attention toward the weekend. The upper-level trough mentioned earlier has been continuously sending shortwave disturbances sprawling across the Great Plains, helping support convection on the periphery of the ridge. So far, the vast majority of this activity has remained north, but with the synoptic pattern expected to flatten out in the coming days, shortwave disturbances traversing the flow will be less likely to experience northeastward "deflections" due to the upper-level ridge. This becomes most apparent late Friday/early Saturday as a shortwave ejected over the Northern Rockies intensifies across the Upper Midwest, helping stifle the ridge and bring zonal flow back to the Central Plains. Though probabilities remain low (only a 20-30% chance at this time), this impulse will bring the first opportunity for scattered showers and storms late Friday evening into early Saturday morning. While there will be plenty of instability available, forecast soundings depict quite an impressive capping inversion. Moreover, the lack of shear locally will limit organized updraft development/sustenance.
A second, slightly higher probability (40-50%) for scattered showers/storms comes Saturday afternoon/evening as a shortwave/vortmax runs across the Plains. Ample instability will once again be available, with forecast soundings now showing a gradual erosion of the cap over the course of the day. Deep- layer shear also looks to improve in the late evening/overnight hours. While the parameter space appears to be conducive of convection, the modes of ascent are unclear beyond PVA associated with the shortwave. Focus for convection looks to come down to mesoscale features not yet apparent...perhaps a residual outflow boundary left from storms in the morning? In that case, uncertainty for the Saturday evening threat is compounded by the uncertainty associated with the morning threat.
Off-and-on rain chances will continue through the early part of next week, but since the forecast is especially low confidence at this range, this has yielded only about a 20-30% chance on any given day.
AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z FRIDAY/
Issued at 1148 PM CDT Wed Jul 1 2026
Mostly clear conditions with occasional high clouds are expected overnight and into early Thursday morning. After sunrise, high clouds look to increase in coverage to SCT along the MO/KS border. Cloud coverage is expected to be most prevalent across NW MO; further south, improvements to FEW or SKC during the early/mid afternoon hours is possible. These VFR conditions are expected to persist through the end of the TAF period with southerly winds at 10 kts/gusts to 20 kts.
EAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
MO...Extreme Heat Warning until 9 PM CDT Friday for MOZ001>008- 011>017-020>025-028>033-037>040-043>046-053-054. KS...Extreme Heat Warning until 9 PM CDT Friday for KSZ025-057-060- 102>105.
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