textproduct: Houston/Galveston

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

- Scattered to occasionally numerous showers/storms expected again today. Portions of the area are in a Slight Risk (level 2 of 4) of Excessive Rainfall.

- In addition to some localized heavy downpours, some 25-45mph wind gusts are possible in the isolated stronger cells.

- Higher pressure nudges into the region from the east later in the work week bringing a return to a more typical summertime weather pattern.

DISCUSSION

Issued at 1218 AM CDT Wed Jul 15 2026

Another day with elevated shower and thunderstorm activity is expected with a mid/upper trof rotating around cntl Tx. Highest PW's should be situated along and south of the I-10 corridor, esp near the Matagorda Bay area and lowest (but still respectable) across the Piney Woods. Combination of some weak llvl convergence near the coast should get some sct activity started toward morning- eventually expanding further NE/inland as the day progresses compliments of daytime heating and weak vort lobes rotating about. There is a slight risk, level 2 of 4, of excessive rainfall across most of the region. Overall, widespread flood issues should be on the low side...but folks that have seen the 3-5"+ over the past few days will be the most prone to quick runoffs and street flooding in any of the heavier downpours. With the column not quite as saturated as it was yesterday, I wouldn't be too surprised to see some 25-45mph gusts in some of those more intense cells as well.

Higher pressure to the east should nudge the Texas trof a bit further westward Thurs & Fri. Corresponding chances of rain should also decline on a day-to-day basis as this occurs heading into the weekend. Not that it'll go to zero, but we should gradually return to more of a typical summertime pattern with more sun, highs back up closer to the mid 90s, and iso-sct diurnally driven precip. 47

AVIATION

(00Z TAF Issuance) Issued at 620 PM CDT Tue Jul 14 2026

SHRA has mostly come to an end across the region, but some lingering light rain will be possible over the next few hours. MVFR ceilings may develop around the northern terminals (CXO northward) late tonight into Wednesday morning. The next round of rain is expected to push in from the west early Wednesday morning and will gradually expand in coverage throughout the morning. Embedded TS development is expected late in the morning into the afternoon hours...the highest confidence windows have been added in PROB30s/TEMPOs. Intermittent periods of MVFR/IFR conditions and gusty winds are possible in and near the strongest storms. SH/TS activity will come to an end in the late afternoon hours (generally after 22Z). Winds will mostly be southeasterly around or less than 10 kt outside of any storms. MVFR ceilings may build in near the northern terminals again late Wednesday.

Batiste

MARINE

Issued at 1218 AM CDT Wed Jul 15 2026

Light to occasionally moderate onshore winds and 2 to 4 foot seas prevail for the next several days. Speeds and seas could be a touch higher in the overnight hours with a slightly tighter pressure gradient setting up. Otherwise, another day or two of elevated storm chances are on tap before things trend back to a more typical summertime pattern heading into late week. Widespread severe weather is not anticipated, though winds and seas will be higher in and near any isolated more intense cells. 47

PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS

College Station (CLL) 85 72 88 74 / 60 20 40 20 Houston (IAH) 86 75 90 78 / 60 20 40 0 Galveston (GLS) 88 83 90 84 / 40 10 20 10

HGX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES

TX...None. GM...None.


IMPORTANT This is an independent project and has no affiliation with the National Weather Service or any other agency. Do not rely on this website for emergency or critical information: please visit weather.gov for the most accurate and up-to-date information available.

textproduct.us is built and maintained by Joshua Thayer.