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 1030 AM CDT Mon May 18 2026
- Low chances (10%-20%) for showers across northeast Alabama today.
- Low to medium chances (20-60%) for showers and thunderstorms returning late Tuesday, then medium to high chances (50-90%) for showers and thunderstorms each day, from Wednesday through the weekend
NEAR TERM
(Tonight) Issued at 236 PM CDT Mon May 18 2026
A warm and breezy day is ongoing across the Tennessee Valley with afternoon temperatures in the mid to upper 80s and winds gusting to 20 mph out of the south. A fair weather Cu field has developed across most of the CWA, but no showers have been detected on radar. Latest CAMs indicate a very low chance (5-10%) of a shower or isolated thunderstorm in NE AL, but most locations are expected to remain dry through tonight. With the warm and moist airmass in place, overnight temperatures only drop down into the mid to upper 60s. Winds should remain around 5mph keeping fog from developing early tomorrow morning.
SHORT TERM
(Tuesday through Thursday) Issued at 1030 AM CDT Mon May 18 2026
Mid-level ridge which has been in place to our east for several days will begin to weaken over the local area on Tuesday as a trough swings across the northern Plains and associated sfc low transitions northeastward across the Great Lakes region. The sfc cold front will push eastward throughout the day Tuesday approaching the local area late on Tuesday into Wednesday. It will slow and become near stationary over MS/AL/GA on Wednesday. As a result, chances for rain/storms will increase Tuesday night into Wednesday along and ahead of the frontal boundary with continued rounds of activity on Wednesday and Thursday as a series of shortwaves transition along the western edge of the subtropical ridge over the TN Valley as plenty of moisture remains in place along the stalled frontal boundary. Morning CAMs coming in are backing off significantly in precip chances with the initial precip coming in tomorrow night with the cold front. Any notable precip chance remain west of I-65 until after sunrise on Wednesday but that still may be too high if trends continue. Rain chances will peak Wednesday and Thursday during the daytime hours between 70%-90% both days. Shear profiles aren't impressive at this time and the severe threat remains low but will feel very summer like in terms of convection with sufficient instability, moisture, and lift in place to fuel these rounds of activity. We are included in a "Marginal" risk for Excessive Rainfall by WPC for Wednesday and Thursday but any rainfall will be beneficial at this point and QPF totals are not anticipated to result in any sort of impactful flooding outside of ponding on roadways where localized higher amounts are seen.
High temps will remain above normal on Tuesday before moderating mid- week into the low/mid 80s under increased cloud cover and weakening ridge.
LONG TERM
(Thursday night through Sunday) Issued at 1045 PM CDT Sun May 17 2026
This pattern will continue largely unabated from Thursday night into the weekend, with a broad summer-like subtropical ridge centered near Bermuda and deep SWRLY flow persisting across the TN Valley. A series of shortwaves are expected to ride along the trough/ridge interface across the region and bring bouts of increased shower/storm activity. Timing this is difficult, as the distinct nature of these shortwaves is difficult to discern in the model guidance. Nevertheless, increased instability during the daytime will certainly act to regulate chances for showers/storms during the period. Thermo profiles during the Thurs-Friday period do not appear to change significantly, with generally moist- adiabatic type profiles in the increasing deep/humid airmass. PWs climbing to near 1.7 inches and only modest CAPEs and weak-modest shear would suggest the largest threat may be due to any localized flash flooding that could result, especially with the prospect for slow-moving training storms. Shear may increase a little into the weekend, but still would characterize as modest at best. Overall, this is reminiscent of a warm, early summer pattern with highs mostly in the 80s and warm nights with lows in the 60s.
AVIATION
(00Z TAFS) Issued at 443 PM CDT Mon May 18 2026
VFR flight weather conditions are forecast. After 15Z Tuesday, southerly flow will increase to ~10kt with gusts of 15-20kt.
HUN WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
AL...None. TN...None.
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