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
- Main focus for severe weather and heavy rain today is across southern and central MO with all hazards (large hail, damaging winds, and tornadoes) possible. Non-severe showers and storms are possible across northern MO.
- Tonight, a cold front will bring much cooler across the region.
- Rest of the week, expect below normal temperatures mostly dry conditions. The risk for hazardous weather is very low.
DISCUSSION
Issued at 147 PM CDT Mon Apr 27 2026
Today and Tonight, early afternoon satellite imagery and surface observations showed a cold front passing through the region, with temperatures in the 50s and northwest wind behind this front. Meanwhile, ahead of the cold front, temperatures are near 80F with southwest winds. An outflow boundary from the early morning storms was laid out west-to-east south of I-70. The warm, unstable air ahead of the cold front and south of the outflow boundary will be the focus for showers and thunderstorms this afternoon. We expect that these storms will be severe, but most favored area for storms is south and east of the forecast area, from central Missouri extending toward Illinois. HiRes guidance shows storm develop in this region early this afternoon, with Updraft Helicity swaths supporting the environmental conditions that these storms will indeed be supercells.
One question regarding severe weather is how long these storms will remain discrete before congealing into a line. If this happens more quickly, then the hail and strong tornado threat transitions more to wind and weak tornadoes. Regardless, the majority of the storms develop east of the forecast area, so our severe weather threat is across the southern tiers of counties from now until late afternoon. Later this evening in the wake of the cold front, there could be some scattered showers or thunderstorms, but these will not produce severe weather or heavy rain. Instead, expect northwest winds with cooler and drier air moving across the region.
Tuesday through Monday, no hazardous weather is expected at this time. On Tuesday an upper level wave will bring some rain across the MO/AR line, but this will lack instability, and the heaviest rain will be south of the state border. On Wednesday northwest flow will lead to upper level subsidence and surface high pressure, meaning light winds and sunny skies. Another weak wave will move through Thursday bringing low chances (10 to 20 percent) for rain, but any amounts should be less than a quarter of an inch. Looking ahead, high pressure will remain in control with dry conditions and light northerly winds on Friday and Saturday. As the surface high advances toward the Tennessee River Valley, southerly winds will bring in slightly warmer temperatures for Sunday into Monday.
AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z WEDNESDAY/
Issued at 1048 PM CDT Mon Apr 27 2026
Conditions range from VFR south of the MO River to MVFR north of the river as an expansive area of cloud cover shifts southward. MVFR ceilings will spread over all sites through the overnight hours, with a chance for low MVFR tomorrow morning. Conditions improve during the afternoon with lower VFR ceilings lingering. gusty northwesterly winds will continue for another few hours then decrease later in the overnight/ early Tuesday morning.
EAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
MO...None. KS...None.
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