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

- Snow and strong winds will continue to diminish through this evening.

- Life-threatening cold temperatures move in for the end of the week and start of the weekend. Wind chills as low as -30 to -45 are possible Friday morning. An Extreme Cold Watch is in effect for Friday morning.

DISCUSSION

Issued at 241 PM CST Wed Jan 21 2026

It's been a very active weather day across the area! Winds may still gust up to 50 to 65 especially near and along the Missouri River Valley for the next few hours before winds start to diminish. Additional snow showers will continue to develop through the afternoon as soundings show instability developing within the DGZ. These snow showers will result in whiteout to near whiteout conditions for the next few hours as well. These snow showers should gradually fade through the evening as we lose daytime heating and instability fades. As mentioned, winds will gradually diminish through the evening hours area-wide as the main push of cold air advection moves southeast of the area. Temperatures will drop mainly to the single digits overnight. Since temperatures did rise near and above freezing earlier today for areas especially near and south of I-90, watch for any refreeze on roadways overnight.

Northwesterly flow aloft continues into the day on Thursday and a weak 700 mb wave looks to cross through the area. This could set off a few more snow showers mainly during the morning into the early afternoon. Chances for this are low (<15%) at this time. The NAM shows additional areas of shallow instability developing Thursday afternoon leading to more snow showers, but this remains an outlier. Winds will pick up again Thursday afternoon as another push of cold air advection moves in, gusting up to 30 mph at times. This could blow around some of the fresh snow, but significant visibility issues are not expected at this time.

Dangerously cold air will move in Thursday night as a ~1050 mb high settles into the area. With the high pressure moving in, winds don't look to be overly strong, but with air temperatures dropping to the 10s to 20s below zero, even a little wind will drop feels-like temperatures to the -25 to -45 degree range. Wind chills look to start dropping to -35 or below along Highway-14 Thursday evening, though HREF probabilities show up to a 30% chance of these low wind chills arriving as early as the late-afternoon in these area. This cold air will quickly spread southwestward through the night, with wind chills of 30 below zero as far south as the Missouri River Valley by daybreak Friday. Wind chills will rise above -35 by the early afternoon, but remain in the 20s and 10s below zero into Friday night. Another upper-wave will dive out of the Canadian Rockies on Friday, with some guidance indicating the potential for light snow along the Missouri River Valley developing Friday night into Saturday. Sounding profiles indicate temperatures mostly colder than the DGZ, so efficient snowfall is unlikely and so any amounts will be very light.

After a very cold Friday with highs below zero, high temperatures will struggle to reach the double digits on the positive side of zero on Saturday and Sunday. Temperatures will moderate somewhat heading into the next work week, though ensembles still show below normal temperatures continuing into next week. A fairly active upper- pattern looks to continue into next week, which may promote some light snow chances here or there, but nothing significant on the horizon for next week at this time.

AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z FRIDAY/

Issued at 530 PM CST Wed Jan 21 2026

Scattered light snow showers linger at the beginning of this period over southwestern Minnesota. These will taper off over the next couple hours. There is a mix of VFR down to IFR ceilings, with the lowest ceilings associated with the scattered snow showers. These will improve to VFR as snow ends.

Strong northwest winds have begun to rapidly decrease as of issuance. Gusts of 20-30 kts will linger for a few more hours before becoming light after midnight. Winds remain out of the northwest and increase Thursday afternoon to 20-25 kts. Some blowing snow is possible with the afternoon winds for areas along Highway 14 from roughly Brookings into Minnesota.

FSD WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES

SD...High Wind Warning until 6 PM CST this evening for SDZ050- 057>060-063>071. Winter Weather Advisory until 6 PM CST this evening for SDZ052>054-059>062-067. Extreme Cold Watch from Thursday evening through Friday afternoon for SDZ038>040-052>056-058>062-065>067-069>071. Blizzard Warning until 6 PM CST this evening for SDZ038>040- 055-056. Extreme Cold Watch from Thursday evening through Friday afternoon for SDZ050-057-063-064-068. MN...Extreme Cold Watch from Thursday evening through Friday afternoon for MNZ071-072-080-081-089-090-097-098. Blizzard Warning until 6 PM CST this evening for MNZ071-072- 080-081-089-090-097-098. IA...High Wind Warning until 6 PM CST this evening for IAZ001-012- 013-020>022-031-032. Winter Weather Advisory until 6 PM CST this evening for IAZ001- 012-013-022. Extreme Cold Watch from Thursday evening through Friday afternoon for IAZ001>003-012>014-020>022-031-032. Blizzard Warning until 6 PM CST this evening for IAZ002-003- 014. NE...High Wind Warning until 6 PM CST this evening for NEZ013-014. Extreme Cold Watch from Thursday evening through Friday afternoon for NEZ013-014.


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