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

- Thunderstorm development tonight carries high uncertainty near and north of Interstate 72. If storms manage to form, they will pose a primary risk of large hail and damaging wind gusts.

- Expect a warm and humid weekend with feel-like temperatures climbing into the low 90s. The overall severe weather threat through Sunday remains minimal.

- A stronger warming trend arrives Wednesday through Friday of next week, pushing heat index values near 100 degrees. There is currently less than a 20% chance for rain to interrupt the heat.

DISCUSSION

Issued at 235 AM CDT Fri Jun 5 2026

Showers and thunderstorms currently situated over portions of Missouri and Iowa are expected to persist and advance eastward through late morning, sustained by a subtle mid-level shortwave and a 40-knot low-level jet traversing the mid-Mississippi Valley. This convective activity should taper off by early afternoon as the shortwave exits to the east and the low-level jet weakens.

The focus then shifts to later this evening as a residual outflow acts as the effective boundary for renewed storm potential across northern Missouri or southern Iowa. Although CAM guidance remains inconsistent regarding storm initiation due to moderate capping and a lack of strong synoptic forcing, an increasingly buoyant environment is expected as an EML and steepening mid- level lapse rates overspread the region. According to latest HREF Mean guidance, MUCAPE values near 2000 J/kg will persist through the overnight hours for areas near and north of the I-72 corridor. The combination of subtle low- level jet forcing and shortwave energy moving through the mid- Mississippi Valley tonight may provide sufficient lift for parcels to reach the LFC. However, the forecast hinges on whether an additional stable layer above the LFC is formidable enough to suppress updrafts; if yes, activity will be minimal, but if no, the environment will support a risk of large hail and sporadic damaging wind gusts.

While flash flooding is not currently a primary concern due to high forecast uncertainty, dry antecedent conditions, and progressive Corfidi vectors that discourage training storms, it cannot be entirely ruled out. High PWATs remain in place, and HREF PMM QPF suggests that isolated areas could still see rainfall totals exceeding 2 inches through tonight.

By Saturday and Sunday, an upper-level ridge will allow a warm, very humid air mass to build in, potentially triggering further thunderstorm activity. Although a diffuse surface boundary draped across the forecast area may serve as a focal point for scattered afternoon storms, the severe weather threat this weekend appears minimal due to lackluster deep-layer shear and poor mid-level lapse rates. The bigger weather story this weekend will be the low 90s feel-like temps.

The upper ridge axis is projected to shift east of the area by Monday and Tuesday, making way for a negatively-tilted trough and multiple shortwaves traveling from the lower-Missouri Valley into central Illinois. This setup brings renewed chances for showers and thunderstorms. While increasingly humid and unstable air will be present, typical seasonal limitations such as weak kinematics and mediocre lapse rates are expected to persist. Consequently, the forecast suggests a largely dry pattern punctuated by scattered, potentially strong thunderstorms.

Looking toward the middle and end of next week, blended NBM guidance indicates a stronger warming trend as a 588-mb ridge establishes itself over the Midwest. Temperatures are currently forecast to reach the low-to-mid 90s, with heat indices nearing 100 degrees from Wednesday through Friday. Although the NBM includes slight (20%) precipitation chances during this timeframe, significant mid- level capping will likely inhibit robust updraft development.

AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z SATURDAY/

Issued at 1212 AM CDT Fri Jun 5 2026

Area of showers/storms currently extending from near Kansas City to southwest Wisconsin is expected to lose some of its punch before reaching central Illinois. Currently projecting the 15-18z time frame for it to pass the terminals, though a PROB30 group for some thunder at KPIA/KSPI will remain in the new TAF set. Toward the end of the period, the evening model guidance is suggesting a west-east line of convection developing in northern or central Illinois. Thinking that most of this threat will be after 06z, but will include a PROB30 at KPIA for the last couple hours.

South winds are expected to pick up overnight, and gusts 20-25 knots should be common by mid morning as winds trend more southwest. The gusts are expected to drop off after 00z, though sustained winds 10-15 knots are still likely in eastern Illinois through Friday evening.

ILX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES

None.


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