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
- Windy and much warmer weather will be on tap today as southerly winds gusting 25-35mph help push afternoon highs into the upper 60s and lower 70s.
- Periodic rain chances will return Thursday through the weekend: however, the severe weather potential will remain very low until early next week.
DISCUSSION
Issued at 329 AM CDT Wed Apr 8 2026
As high pressure shifts to the East Coast, southeasterly winds this morning will veer to southerly and increase markedly this afternoon. The 00z Apr 8 HREF indicates an 80-100% chance of gusts over 25mph along/north of a Taylorville to Danville line and a 30-50% chance of gusts exceeding 35mph along/north of a Macomb to Bloomington line. Patchy mid-level cloud cover will dissipate and/or shift eastward into Indiana over the next few hours, with forecast soundings showing only high/thin cloud cover for the remainder of the day. Given the increasing southerly winds and ample sunshine, temperatures will rebound nicely from early morning lows in the upper 30s and lower 40s as afternoon highs top out in the upper 60s and lower 70s.
A vigorous short-wave trough noted on 08z/3am water vapor imagery over southern Saskatchewan will track eastward along the U.S./Canada border and will push a cold front southward toward central Illinois late tonight into Thursday. The front will gradually lose its southward momentum as it becomes parallel to the upper-level flow and will remain north of the KILX CWA until Friday. With weak convergence along the slow-moving front and precipitable water values only increasing to around 1 inch immediately along/ahead of it, am not expected widespread showers/thunder in central Illinois. Have therefore limited rain chances to locations along/north of the I-72 corridor late tonight through Thursday with rainfall generally 0.25 or less.
As a second short-wave trough currently further upstream over British Columbia tracks into the Great Lakes, it will give the front renewed southerly momentum and should push it through central Illinois on Friday. As the wave approaches, the NAM depicts a 45-50kt 850mb jet streak developing from the Texas panhandle northeastward to Illinois Thursday night. This feature will transport additional moisture/instability into the region, with precipitable water values increasing to around 1.25. With better moisture to work with, think showers and a few thunderstorms will become more widespread along/northwest of the I-55 corridor late Thursday night where 60-80 PoPs are warranted. The showers will spread southward across the remainder of central Illinois Friday morning before the front sinks into the Ohio River Valley and brings an end to the rain chances by Friday night.
The Friday frontal boundary will weaken considerably, then surge back northward into the Great Lakes by Saturday night into Sunday. With only weak forcing in place and an overall lack of deep-layer moisture/instability, think the weekend will be mostly dry. Highs will be in the middle to upper 60s on Saturday, then will soar into the upper 70s and lower 80s by Sunday as southerly flow returns.
As has been discussed for the past couple of days, the next chance for severe weather across central Illinois will hold off until early next week as a pronounced upper trough over the western CONUS begins to shift eastward. While deep-layer southwesterly flow ahead of the trough will bring a sharp increase in moisture levels on Monday, the primary forcing mechanisms will remain well north and west of Illinois. The most likely time frame for widespread thunderstorms and potential severe weather will be next Tuesday when both the GFS and ECMWF show a cold front interacting with the copious moisture. While it is still too early to pin down any exact details/timing, an early look at both NCAR and NSSL severe probabilities shows a 15-30% chance across central Illinois next Tuesday.
AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z THURSDAY/
Issued at 1255 PM CDT Wed Apr 8 2026
VFR conditions will prevail through the 18z/1 pm Thu TAF period. South winds 15-20 kts will gust 25-30 kts this afternoon and gusts subsiding to 20-25 kts after sunset this evening. Winds will gradually veer to the SW overnight into Thu morning and still gust 20-25 kts. A 40-45 kt sw 925 mb/low-level jet streak developing late evening and overnight. Continued mention of LLWS at PIA overnight where winds become less gusty, and if winds drop off more overnight over rest of central IL, may need LLWS at BMI and CMI as well. An approaching cold front moving into nw IL by daybreak and across area just north of PIA and BMI by midday Thu to bring isolated showers to these airports late tonight mid mid Thu morning.
ILX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
None.
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