textproduct: Huntsville

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

Updated at 448 AM CST Sat Nov 22 2025

- Mostly dry weather forecast through Monday morning.

- High chances of showers and thunderstorms Monday night into Tuesday night, with a low chance of severe thunderstorms (1 out of 5 Risk from SPC). This risk of severe storms may increase as we get closer to the event.

- Cooler temperatures moving in late next week (on and around Thanksgiving).

NEAR TERM

(Today) Issued at 440 AM CST Sun Nov 23 2025

A post-frontal trough axis is sweeping south from southern Tennessee towards central Alabama tonight. It has kept winds up just enough to help ensure with widespread cloud cover fog doesn't really develop over northern Alabama and southern middle

This will bring some colder and drier air into northern Alabama and southern middle Tennessee during today. Instead of seeing highs in the lower to mid 70s, we should see highs struggle to make it into the lower to mid 60s for highs. These temperatures will be tempered not just by cold air advection, but the morning cloud cover before it pushes fairly quickly into central AL and GA and dissipates by 9 or 10 AM CST. Northerly winds around 5 mph should increase a bit to between 5 and 10 mph this afternoon. Lowered dewpoints, looking at forecast soundings, due to some mixing of drier air aloft that should occur.

SHORT TERM

(Sunday night through Tuesday) Issued at 448 AM PM CST Sat Nov 22 2025

Models fairly quickly push the center of the surface high east late this afternoon into tonight. This should help to put in place strong warm air and moisture advection upstream of the area. Despite that, in the lower boundary layer, drier air will be slow to modify. Light winds on the west side of the surface high will likely produce good radiational cooling conditions. As a result, lows will likely drop into the upper 30s to lower 40s overnight.

As the high moves further east and off the Mid-Atlantic coast on Monday, return flow around it from the Gulf Coast begins to make it northward into our area in earnest. Despite increasing clouds in the morning and mostly cloudy conditions by the afternoon, strong warm air advection should push temperatures into the upper 60s to lower 70s in the afternoon. Strong low level moisture advection is expected as well as the upper level disturbance races east into eastern Kansas and Missouri. A cold front extends SSW from this feature aloft into eastern Texas Monday afternoon. This front will be the weather maker for northern Alabama and southern middle Tennessee as it pushes east Monday night into Tuesday.

Very strong forcing is shown in models ahead of this front both Monday night and on Tuesday over the southeast. At this time, it looks like models are clustering around the main portion of this forcing moving east and approaching NW ALabama between midnight on Monday and 6 AM on Tuesday. This strong warm air advection should push lows higher into the mid to upper 50s. This forcing then pushes east through the day on Tuesday into Georgia.

Models are continuing to show good shear, surface based instability (200 to 1000 J/KG - highest near and south of the TN river), steep lapse rates, ample helicity (200-300 m2/s2), and low wet- bulb zero heights developing ahead of this cold front. The strongest forcing seems to concentrate over northern Alabama and southern middle Tennessee between 3 AM and noon on Tuesday. Right now, given some uncertainties in exact timing and the northward extent of the better instability, expectations of severe weather are still on the low side. However, could see some portion of the area (maybe southern portion) see an increased risk on Tuesday as we get closer. Given the parameters, all modes of severe weather seem possible if some does occur. Widespread rainfall amounts of 1-2" are forecast across the region -- but given how dry we've been of late, don't expect much in the way of flooding concerns with this activity.

LONG TERM

(Tuesday night through Saturday) Issued at 927 PM CST Sat Nov 22 2025

Rain showers will taper off Tuesday night, with an appreciable air mass change in wake of this front. High temperatures will drop to the upper 50s to lower 60s on Wednesday and the upper 40s to lower 50s on Thursday (Thanksgiving Day) and Black Friday as a cooler, drier continental air mass filters into the region. Thus, despite clear and sunny conditions each day, breezy northerly winds will keep temperatures on the chilly side -- and highs below normal heading through the remainder of the Thanksgiving holiday weekend and the month of November.

AVIATION

(12Z TAFS) Issued at 605 AM CST Sun Nov 23 2025

Not much change in the forecast. MVFR CIGS have enveloped both terminals overnight. This will continue through the morning hours. After 18Z, guidance does show cloud cover dissipating over the terminals. It may remain in place longer in Mississippi and Arkansas. VFR conditions will be in place after 18Z with clear skies.

HUN WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES

AL...None. TN...None.


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