textproduct: Central Illinois
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
- Dangerous heat continues across central and southeast Illinois through Thursday afternoon. Peak afternoon heat index values are forecast to reach between 105 and 110 degrees, with very warm overnight temperatures providing little to no physical relief.
- Isolated to scattered storms remain possible (40% to 60% chance) over the holiday weekend. Unsettled conditions persist through Sunday before a stronger cold front arrives late Sunday into Monday to finally sweep away the intense humidity.
DISCUSSION
Issued at 303 PM CDT Tue Jun 30 2026
Extreme Heat Through Thursday...
An unseasonably amplified pattern continues to dominate the central U.S., featuring an anomalous 594 dam upper-level ridge centered squarely over the Mississippi and Ohio River Valleys. Strong deep-layer subsidence associated with this heat dome will govern regional weather through the middle of the week, effectively capping the atmosphere, suppressing widespread convection, and locking in extreme heat across central and southeast Illinois.
While ambient afternoon high temperatures are expected to settle in the low to mid-90s, the primary operational concern remains the oppressive humidity. Significant boundary-layer moisture pooling will hold dewpoints in the mid-70s. While this extreme moisture may actually keep ambient temperatures in the mid 90s, hazardous heat indices will more than compensate. Blended guidance (NBM) maintains high confidence in peak daily heat index values between 105 and 110 degrees through Thursday afternoon.
Given the extended duration of this event and overnight lows only dropping into the mid-to-upper 70s--offering virtually no nocturnal relief--the cumulative heat stress will be substantial. Consequently, the Excessive Heat Warning remains in effect for central and southeast Illinois through Thursday evening.
Pattern Transition and Thunderstorm Potential Friday...
A synoptic transition toward a more active phase begins Thursday night into Friday. Ensemble data indicates a series of shortwave troughs exiting the Northern Rockies, which will act to flatten the persistent ridge and shunt the upper high toward the Mid-Atlantic. This structural shift will open a deep Gulf moisture plume, establishing an unstable southwest flow across the Mid-Mississippi River Valley.
Precipitation chances will rise notably on Friday as a lead shortwave tracks toward the Great Lakes, dragging a slow-moving cold front just north of our forecast area. Broad synoptic lift interacting with this high-theta-e environment supports daily thunderstorm probabilities in the 40-60% range.
The environmental profile is expected to be significantly divided between its thermodynamic and kinematic characteristics. Abundant low-level moisture and precipitable water (PWAT) values at or above 2.0 inches will yield significant thermodynamic instability, with MUCAPE likely exceeding 2500 J/kg. Conversely, kinematics will be highly limited. With the primary mid- and upper-level dynamics focused well north of the local area, deep-layer shear and mid-level jet support will remain weak, keeping 0-6 km bulk shear values under 20 knots.
Given this weak wind profile, organized or widespread severe weather is not anticipated. However, within this tropical, high- PWAT airmass, high precipitation efficiency will favor localized heavy downpours and wet microbursts from pulse convection or transient, disorganized clusters.
Holiday Weekend Outlook...
Predictability for the holiday weekend remains on the lower side due to typical model timing discrepancies within a chaotic, low-amplitude zonal flow. While a widespread washout is not expected, stalled surface boundaries and strong diurnal heating will sustain isolated to scattered storm risks (40-60% PoPs) through Sunday.
A stronger, more progressive cold front is forecast to arrive late Sunday into Monday. This boundary should finally scour out the tropical airmass, dropping dewpoints back into the upper 60s and signaling a welcome return to more seasonable conditions for the start of the new work week.
AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z THURSDAY/
Issued at 1229 AM CDT Wed Jul 1 2026
VFR conditions continue through this TAF period. SSW winds become breezy during the daytime hours with gusts up around 20 kt, then drop below 10 kts by evening.
ILX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
Extreme Heat Warning until midnight CDT Thursday night for ILZ027>031-036>038-040>057-061>063-066>068-071>073.
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