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
- Severe thunderstorms are forecast late this afternoon into tonight, with the potential for strong tornadoes, large hail over 2 inches, and wind gusts over 70 mph.
- Heavy rainfall tonight brings a risk of localized flash flooding, particularly for urban and low-lying areas.
- A powerful cold front arrives Sunday, shifting temperatures sharply below normal for early next week.
DISCUSSION
Issued at 155 PM CDT Tue Mar 10 2026
A volatile environment is developing across central Illinois this afternoon. Surface analysis at 1 pm showed a warm/stationary front extending from 1003 mb low pressure over northeast KS, across far southeast IA, and into northern IL just south of the I-80 corridor. South of this boundary MLCAPEs have risen to 2000+ J/kg over west central IL, and these are forecast to increase to near 3k J/kg by early evening as moisture pools on strong southwest low level flow. Deep layer shear at 45-55 kt is sufficient for sustained/organized updrafts and supercells given the background environment. Low level helicity is currently lacking south of the front, but this is forecast to increase late afternoon/evening as low pressure approaches and a 40-50 kt 925 mb jet develops. Before that jet develops, forcing for convective development this afternoon is nebulous, and may be tied to DPVA and convergence provided by a southwest moving lake front. 18z ILX sounding showed a cap near 850 mb, and this may be difficult to overcome this afternoon with such weak forcing, especially away from the front. CAMs have shown varying solutions from nothing to scattered cells over our far northern counties mid to late afternoon. For now confidence is low that we'll see much prior to 6 pm, but if development does occur, very large hail and damaging winds would be the most likely initial impacts given the very steep mid level laps rates and lack of low level helicity.
Higher confidence that convective development will occur near to shortly after 6 pm as the low level jet rapidly increases. CAMs have shown better agreement both run to run and model to model that storm coverage and intensity will escalate near and northwest of the IL River Valley, with individual cells tracking northeast. 0-3 km shear vectors suggest that the supercell phase may be short-lived, before upscale growth into linear mode occurs. Nevertheless, a concerning environment for strong, long-track tornadoes exists for a few hours this evening given the instability and strong low level shear. For this reason, SPC has upgraded areas north of a Havana to Bloomington line to a Moderate Risk of severe storms (level 4 of 5). In this area, tornado probabilities are 15-30% within 25 miles of a point. Intensity estimates from SPC show EF3, or strong tornadoes, are expected within this region. Very large hail in excess of 2" is also a high concern resulting from very steep lapse rates and a favorable CAPE profile. As the storms grow into a linear complex overnight, we'll likely shift toward a damaging wind and heavy rain threat. HREF PMM shows some streaks of 2-3" where training occurs, which is reasonable given high PWATs. Thus localized flash flooding will become a concern, particularly in urban and low lying areas.
Rain lingers into Wed morning, especially east of I-55 as the front slowly sags south. Much cooler air arrives behind the front, with NBM- guided lows in the upper 20s Wed night.
Quiet weather is forecast for Friday and Saturday as high pressure moves across the Midwest. Temperatures trend warmer on Saturday ahead of the next major system.
By Sunday, a strong low-pressure system tracks through the Great Lakes, pulling a sharp cold front through central Illinois. While some timing uncertainty exists, rain is forecast to transition to a brief period of snow or rain snow/mix Sunday night as temperatures plummet. High Confidence exists in a significant cool-down for early next week. The ECMWF EFI shows values below -0.8 for 2m temperatures, indicating a very unusual cold event for mid- March. CPCs 6-10 day outlook reinforces this trend, favoringwell-below-normal temperatures.
25
AVIATION
(For the 18z TAFs through 18z Wednesday Afternoon) Issued at 1246 PM CDT Tue Mar 10 2026
Areas of MVFR ceilings early this afternoon should rise to VFR levels over the next few hours. South-southwest gradient winds will continue to be gusty through this evening, near 25 kt at times. The best coverage of TSRA is expected to develop early this evening near KPIA, then gradually shift southeast through the overnight. This will produce a long stretch of 6-10 hours where TSRA will be occurring at or near the central IL terminals. TSRA will diminish later tonight, then low clouds and scattered -SHRA will be common through Wed morning. Guidance has higher probabilities of IFR ceilings near the I-74 corridor Wed morning. Winds will veer west late tonight, and northwest Wed morning as a cold front pushes through. A lull in gusts is shown by some guidance early morning, then increasing gusts after 14-16z.
25
CLIMATE
Issued at 1249 PM CDT Sun Mar 8 2026
Record high temperatures for Tuesday:
Location Tuesday ======== ========= Bloomington 78 (1893) Champaign 73 (1990) Charleston 79 (1990) Decatur 79 (1990) Lincoln 78 (1955) Olney 80 (1990) Peoria 77 (1955) Springfield 80 (1955)
Geelhart
ILX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
None.
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