textproduct: Sioux Falls

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

- Isolated storms are possible this afternoon near the US Highway 20 corridor from 4 to 8 PM. If storms develop, large hail to 2 inches and wind gusts to 60 mph are possible. Confidence in storm development during this time is low (less than 30%).

- Thunderstorms increase in coverage tonight into early Sunday. Strong to severe storms will capable of large hail to 2 inches and 60 mph wind gusts.

- A significant severe weather episode is possible Sunday afternoon into Sunday night. Very large hail, straight line winds, and several tornadoes will be possible. This risk may extend into Monday.

- If you have outdoor plans Sunday afternoon through Monday, the time is now to prepare and have alternative plans in place.

UPDATE

Issued at 333 AM CDT Sat May 16 2026

No changes to the forecast through the afternoon with regards to the forecast or locally elevated fire danger due to low humidity.

Greatest change and trend to monitor this morning has been the uptick in the 16.00z CAMs (HRRR, ARW, some members of the HREF) showing convective initiation much earlier this afternoon than previously expected along and near the US Hwy 20 corridor. This appears to be in response to a few of the deterministic models pulling the theta-e/moisture gradient and instability a bit further northward, as well as some localized PVA/WAA. If storms can develop between 4 and 8 PM in this area, large hail and damaging winds are possible (hail to 2 inches and wind gusts to 60 mph). 16.06z HRRR guidance has backed off on this potential development, but trends will be monitored. Confidence is low (less than 30% in this afternoon storm development. Additionally, CAMs do show some showers and isolated storms further west in central SD this afternoon and early evening; however, instability is lacking so severe risk during this time out west appears low.

More widespread showers and storms (including severe risk) still looks to be late this evening into early Sunday morning, roughly 10 PM to 5 AM as the next wave ejects out of NE into our forecast area late tonight.

Concern continues to grow for Sunday's severe potential. More details below. With continued severe weather threats over the next few days, review your severe weather plans now. Have multiple ways to receive warnings, including at least one that will wake you up with storms possible after dark.

DISCUSSION

Issued at 129 PM CDT Fri May 15 2026

THIS AFTERNOON: Poorly defined "cool" front continues to slowly sink southeast this afternoon now entering southern Minnesota and far northwestern Iowa as of 1pm. Southerly winds are slowly advecting 50 dewpoints into the area ahead of the boundary, but generally models have been too quick to pull higher dew point air northward. By late this afternoon a weak impulse in the 700:500 mb layer will arrive into the Tri-State. This increased lift combined with slight pressure rises to the northwest of the front should create a bit more convergence sufficient for convection development in a portion of NW Iowa (along and southeast of a line from Sioux City to Spencer). Soundings indicate MLCAPE values may approach 1000- 1500 J/KG, with an increase in effective bulk shear towards 40+ knots. In any storm that develops, large hail (potentially 2" or greater) will be possible as mid-lvl lapse rates break the 8C/KM mark. Inverted V soundings along the periphery of the CWA boundary in NW Iowa would suggest downburst potential increases as well. With the mean wind increasing from the west northwest, storms should begin to congeal into one or more linear clusters as they head into central Iowa. The peak timing for development and impact falls within the 6pm to 9pm timeframe.

TONIGHT: Storms move southeast of the forecast area very early in the overnight period, leaving quiet and dry conditions overhead. Soundings show a pronounced low-mid lvl dry layer advecting southward through the night.

SATURDAY: The aforementioned frontal boundary will be pushed by convection closer to I-80 by Saturday morning, leaving dry and quiet conditions in the local area for most of Saturday. A persistent easterly 850 mb wind fetch is not expected to bring meaningful moisture northward through the day with the surface boundary tracking northward towards Highway 20 by mid-evening. Temperatures under filtered sunshine peak in the lower 80s, and with persistent low RH and breezy easterly surface winds fire danger may be elevated.

SATURDAY NIGHT: Today's guidance has slowed the northward advection of rich theta-e air northward which will likely keep the area convection free deep into the evening. We will be watching areas of central and southern Nebraska tied to surface low pressure and the existing warm front that remains in place. Convection is expected to develop as a stronger wave ejects into the Plains. One or more clusters of strong to severe storms will attempt to track north or northeast along the advancing elevated moisture axis and towards the MO River valley after midnight. MUCAPE remains somewhat marginal with the initial surge of moisture, and mid-lvl lapse rates are only in the 6.5-7 C/KM range throughout the hail growth zone. Nevertheless, effective shear may just be strong enough to produce a few elevated supercells capable of larger hail into Sunday morning. Tend to feel the straight line wind risk may be lower, but should the surface front lift northward or boundary layer become only loosely stabilized, then a few stronger gusts could transport down through the MO River Valley into NW Iowa into daybreak.

SUNDAY-SUNDAY NIGHT: Significant severe weather potential is possible Sunday afternoon into Sunday night. After morning convection lifts northeast of the CWA early in the morning, guidance is becoming more confident in a period of shortwave subsidence moving overhead through a large part of the daytime hours of Sunday. While we'll enter a quiet period, moderate to extreme instability will continue to advect northward into the Tri-State area with some models hinting at potential for AOA 3000 J/KG by mid-afternoon. Soundings across the area suggest an EML will hold in place into at least the mid afternoon hours as we wait for a deeper trough to lift into the Plains. This trough should work to push the effective warm front further north while reinforcing a pre-existing cold front across central NE/SD. The arrival of deeper synoptic lift after 21Z could lead to explosive convective development by early evening. With the large reservoir of instability, bulk shear over 50 knots, and strong low-lvl buoyancy all modes of severe weather will be likely. Numerous sounding analogs suggest 2-4" hail in any discrete or initial updraft that forms. Storms staying discrete is somewhat in question, with guidance hinting that the potential for quick upscale growth into a linear line with embedded supercells progressing east northeast instead. The increase in the low-lvl flow after dark and and slight backing of surface winds could lead to a much greater potential of QLCS activity into the late evening and overnight hours as storms track into Iowa and Minnesota.

As we move past midnight, models suggest the highest severe weather threat will migrate eastward with the line. However, there remains a high degree of uncertainty in the evolution after midnight. ECMWF/NAM/CMC are holding back the upper trough to the west, and actually allow deeper instability to lift back northward into Monday morning. The persistent 40-50 knot LLJ could lead to scattered hail producing supercells continuing into Monday morning. Still very uncertain.

MONDAY: A continued severe weather risks seems plausible on Monday depending on what happens overnight. Should the GFS based models hold true, then both surface based and elevated instability slides east of the area. However ECMWF/NAM solutions would pull the surface front back westward while leaving a large degree of elevated instability westward. There's just too much uncertainty to get into specifics, but Monday could also feature potential for higher end severe weather especially in areas along or east of I-90.

TUESDAY-THURSDAY: We'll see a distinct cooldown in temperatures as we head towards the middle of the week. Highs on Tuesday with a cooler northwest wind only rise into the the upper 50s. A slow recovery towards the lower to middle 60s is possible by Wednesday. The pattern through the rest of the week remains quasi-zonal, suggesting one more more weak disturbances moving through the flow creating a few rain chances by the second half of the week.

AVIATION /12Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z SUNDAY/

Issued at 623 AM CDT Sat May 16 2026

VFR conditions through much of the afternoon and into the evening hours. Most of the guidance has trended down with any evening TSRA development near US Hwy 20, but will keep an eye on the 16.12z runs to see if trends hold. Showers may develop across south central SD this afternoon. More widespread shower and storm chances return from south to north after 17.04z. Guidance is quite varied on coverage, but did include at least PROB30 and prevailing -SHRA at all terminals, and limited -TSRA mention to KSUX for now. Any convection may lead to MVFR or lower conditions. Additionally, strong to severe storms are possible with large hail and wind gusts to around 50 knots.

Winds this morning remain variable, increasing and shifting to the east-southeast. Gusts this afternoon and into the overnight hours increase to 20-30 knots, strongest overnight. Some guidance indicates marginal LLWS for the MO River Valley and up toward KHON, but think that gusts will preclude any LLWS.

FSD WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES

SD...None. MN...None. IA...None. NE...None.


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