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

- There is a low (5-15%) chance for localized flash flooding tonight due to additional heavy rainfall.

- The severe weather potential is increasing for Thursday, primarily between 4pm and 9pm. Tornadoes and damaging thunderstorm winds are the primary hazards.

- Gusty, non- thunderstorm winds will grip the region on Thursday. Occasional gusts between 30-50 mph are likely, posing a risk to high-profile vehicles traveling along east- west highways.

DISCUSSION

Issued at 401 PM CDT Wed Apr 1 2026

This afternoon marks a brief return to drier and cooler conditions as an elongated surface high-pressure system quickly moves across the region under rising mid-level heights. Temperatures have dropped significantly, nearly 30 degrees behind the front, resulting in afternoon highs in the upper 40s areawide.

Another round of showers and thunderstorms is expected tonight into Thursday as a robust shortwave trough moves over the central U.S. Locally heavy rainfall is possible, mainly focused near and north of the Illinois River Valley, where 0.75"-2" is forecast based on the latest HREF LPMM QPF guidance. Activity will blossom along and north of a lifting warm front. The necessary lift, moisture, and forcing will be provided by a strong low-level jet overrunning this surface boundary, combined with subtle shortwave energy rippling-in parallel to the boundary, supporting another round of locally heavy rain closer to the surface low.

The risk of severe weather then looms for Thursday with central Illinois positioned well within the warm sector, ahead of an advancing dry line. Temperatures and dewpoints will surge on the nose of gusty southerly winds with afternoon highs pushing well into the 70s and dewpoints into the 60s. Partial sunshine should support deep boundary mixing in areas east of the Illinois River Valley, within occasional gusts up to 50 mph. A wind advisory is now in effect for a good chunk of Thursday to cover this non-thunderstorm wind threat.

The tornado potential, specifically, remains somewhat uncertain. Favorable conditions for supercell and multicell cluster development exist: an incoming 500-mb speed maximum pushing deep layer shear into the 40-50 kt range, and ample buoyancy across the warm sector (1500 J/kg). Furthermore, a strong LLJ of 50-60 kts will veer in, supporting elongated hodographs conducive to robust low-level spin.

Despite these factors, two elements may limit tornado production during the afternoon: relatively high LCLs and the fact that the better Storm Relative Helicity (SRH) is expected to be displaced over parts of northern Illinois and southern Wisconsin. Consequently, the highest tornado risk may be delayed until the evening hours, directly along the dry line as it moves across central Illinois.

Global forecast models continue to indicate a significant upper- level trough and frontal system approaching by Friday evening, likely bringing another round of showers and thunderstorms. The current expectation is for a decaying line of storms to enter west-central Illinois late Friday night, perhaps washing out Saturday morning before convection redevelops along it Saturday afternoon across the eastern third of Illinois. Severe weather may accompany this frontal passage as well, with the SPC currently outlining central Illinois in a Marginal Risk (Level 1 of 5) for Friday night.

Following the weekend system, drier and seasonably cooler weather is strongly anticipated starting Sunday. This is due to a persistent upper-level ridge that will develop across the western CONUS, resulting in high pressure dominating our area.

AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z FRIDAY/

Issued at 1228 AM CDT Thu Apr 2 2026

IFR ceilings will be common overnight ahead of warm front, which is located in southern IL as of 05Z. As the front lifts north later this morning, ceilings will rise to MVFR and then eventually VFR. Winds will be gusty through the period, veering from the northeast to the south-southwest by midday. Several waves of showers and storms are expected the next 24 hours, with most activity staying west of I-55 overnight. More widespread thunderstorm coverage is likely this afternoon south of the warm front with another round expected Thursday night along a cold front. Thunderstorm activity has been covered by PROB30 and TEMPO groups due to low confidence in exact timing at each terminal.

ILX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES

Wind Advisory from 10 AM this morning to 6 PM CDT this evening for ILZ038-042>046-051>057-061>063-067-068.


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