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
- Isolated Severe Storms through Thursday: Scattered thunderstorms late this afternoon through Thursday evening bring a threat of isolated damaging wind gusts and large hail. These hazards shift from central Illinois today to areas south of Interstate 70 on Thursday.
- Heavy Rainfall and Flooding: Multiple rounds of storms bring a heavy rainfall and flood threat from Thursday night through Friday night. There is a 75% chance that rainfall totals will exceed 2 inches for locations south of Interstate 72.
- Dangerous Heat Next Week: A prolonged period of oppressive heat and humidity builds into the region Sunday through Wednesday. High confidence exists that daily heat index values will consistently exceed 100 degrees across the entire area.
DISCUSSION
Issued at 1159 AM CDT Wed Jun 24 2026
Through Tonight: Marginal Severe Risk & Convective Trends...
Water vapor imagery this afternoon captures a compact mid-level shortwave trough pivoting across the upper Mississippi Valley, forcing an associated cold front into central Wisconsin. Further south, several subtle shortwave impulses embedded within broad meridional flow are tracking southeastward toward northern Illinois and eastern Iowa. This combined forcing will generate scattered showers and thunderstorms across the local area from late this afternoon through the evening hours.
The overall outlook for severe weather remains Marginal (Level 1 of 5) due to a few thermodynamic limiting factors.
Thermodynamics & Instability: Boundary layer instability will peak late this afternoon as surface temperatures climb into the lower 80s over mid-60s dewpoints. This will yield MLCAPE values of 15002000 J/kg, extending as far east as the Interstate 55 corridor.
Kinematics: Deep-layer shear will see a modest increase to around 40 knots (06 km bulk shear) as a 500-mb jet core skirts the region.
Capping & Lapse Rates: Updraft acceleration will face headwinds from weak mid-level lapse rates (6C/km) and a notable warm layer below 500 mb sampled by the 12z ILX sounding.
While the primary synoptic ascent and highest storm coverage will remain focused to our north and west in closer proximity to the cold front, there is sufficient mesoscale support for a few strong to severe cells late today. Elongated and somewhat wavy hodographs suggest multi-cell structures with isolated damaging wind gusts and large hail as the primary threats, while the tornado threat remains negligible. Vigorous multi-cell clusters should be monitored through mid-evening as far south as the Interstate 72/Danville corridor before nocturnal stabilization sets in.
Thursday: Frontal Progression Shifts Hazards South...
Overnight and into Thursday, the surface cold front is projected to sag slowly southward through the forecast area. This spatial progression will compress the severe weather threat further south, restricting afternoon shower and thunderstorm potential primarily to areas along and south of the Interstate 70 corridor.
Because boundary layer conditions near this slow- moving frontal zone are expected to mirror today's environment, isolated strong to severe thunderstorms will remain possible. Close monitoring will be required for any robust cells capable of producing localized damaging wind gusts and large hail.
Thursday Night through Friday Night: Rainfall & Flooding Threat...
By Thursday night, the surface front is anticipated to stall out between the Interstate 70 and Interstate 72 corridors as the primary upper-level forcing shifts toward the eastern Great Lakes. The forecast focus will quickly transition to a heavy rainfall and hydrologic threat along this stationary boundary. A train of multiple upper-level shortwaves and weak surface low-pressure systems will traverse the stalled front from Thursday night through Friday night, interacting with a deeply saturated tropical airmass.
Precipitation Totals: Latest NBM guidance indicates an impressive 75% chance of rainfall totals exceeding 2 inches by Saturday morning along a corridor extending from Pittsfield to Lawrenceville.
Hydrologic Context: Saturated antecedent soil conditions from recent active weather will maximize runoff potential, elevating flash flood and river flooding concerns.
Headlines: Given the high confidence in multi-round convective rainfall over vulnerable basins, a Flood Watch has been issued for areas south of I-72 from Thursday afternoon to Saturday afternoon.
Saturday through Next Week: Building Heat Dome & Oppressive Humidity...
Precipitation chances will diminish significantly by Saturday afternoon as the synoptic pattern undergoes major amplification. A persistent and highly anomalous upper-level trough digging over western North America will trigger robust downstream rising heights, establishing a formidable heat dome directly across the Midwest.
Temperatures: Daily maximum temperatures will routinely reach the lower 90s starting Sunday.
Heat Indices: Combined with high ambient humidity and pooling boundary layer moisture, latest NBM guidance indicates that heat index values may consistently exceed 100F from Sunday through Wednesday of next week.
Headlines: This prolonged period of oppressive heat will likely necessitate a series of Excessive Heat Advisories or Warnings for the entire region heading into next week.
AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z FRIDAY/
Issued at 1243 AM CDT Thu Jun 25 2026
Scattered thunderstorms ahead of an approaching frontal boundary will affect the I-72 terminals KSPI-KDEC-KCMI for the first few hours of the 06Z TAF period, then progress south of the area for the remainder of the forecast period. As the frontal boundary stalls to the south and begins to shift northward with an approaching disturbance from the west along the front, increasing low cloud cover will develop late in the period. Rain and embedded thunderstorms will likely develop in the next few to several hours after 06Z Friday. Winds becoming light and variable overnight, then NW 5-10 kts by around 18Z. Winds decreasing again after 00Z Friday.
ILX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
Flood Watch from this afternoon through Saturday afternoon for ILZ052-054-056-061>063-066>068-071>073.
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