textproduct: Louisville

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

* Winter storm to bring significant snow accumulations to southern Indiana and north-central Kentucky tonight, with 3-5 inches expected. Snow accumulations of 1-3 inches expected for central Kentucky. Travel impacts are likely for the region tonight and for the Friday morning commute.

* Another quick-hitting clipper system is expected to bring an additional 1-3 inches of snow for areas north of I-64 during Saturday afternoon into Saturday night.

* Very cold airmass will move into the region on Sunday through Monday, as lows will be in the single digits and highs on Sunday in the teens and low 20s. Minimum wind chills may bottom out in the 10 below to 10 above zero range.

* Temperatures will steadily warm Monday afternoon through mid next week.

UPDATE

Issued at 1055 PM EST Thu Dec 11 2025

Did another expansion southward with the Advisory at this hour to extend from Barren county down into the Lake Cumberland region. Kentucky Transportation Cabinet has reported accumulating snowfall and some roads being covered, and with that southern band persisting for another hour or two decided to include them in the Advisory. Overall, pretty impressed with the farther south trend of this system, especially with the southern edge holding strong against the low level warm advection component as the clipper/surface low approaches.

Starting to see see some amounts around 2 inches across north central KY, and am becoming a bit concerned that the Winter Storm Warning is too far north, and will need to be adjusted a couple counties southward. Will keep things as is for now, and will monitor over the next few hours.

Previous Update...

Two distinct NW-SE oriented bands of snow continue to work eastward across the region this evening. The first band was oriented from southern Indiana and through the southwest/west part of the Louisville Metro and then continues SE through Lincoln county KY. Second band was located from Owensboro southeast through areas just north of Bowling Green down over to near Albany, KY.

The northern band has put down around 1-1.5 inches as it passed through areas across the west. This activity will continue to spread eastward down the I-64 corridor this evening and into the overnight eventually overspreading the Lexington Metro area. Still likely to see a strong gradient of snowfall on the southern edge of that northern line. In the axis of this northern line, total snowfall accumulations of 3-5 inches are expected from southern Indiana through the metro Louisville and down over toward Lexington. A smaller ribbon of enhanced snowfall may develop from Orange/Washington IN into the northern part of Jefferson KY and maybe over into Shelby/Spencer. In places that overachieve, not out of the question to see amounts perhaps hit 6 inches.

Further south, decent band of snow from Ohio southeastward through Edmonson/Barren/Cumberland will continue this evening and into the overnight. Local accumulations of a coating to an inch or two is not out of the question here. Though, confidence is a little lower as ground/air temps are a bit warmer across southern KY which may limit actual ground accumulations.

As far as headlines, will keep Winter Storm Warning in place at this time, but continue to monitor to see if we need to expand a little further south. Confidence on the northern edge of the forecast area is a little less as main heavy band may pass just south of the northern Bluegrass...or at least we'll see a gradient of snow taper off to the north. Based on radar imagery, have expanded the Winter Weather Advisory a row of counties on the southern side to account for light accumulations/impacts.

SHORT TERM /THROUGH SATURDAY/

Issued at 400 PM EST Thu Dec 11 2025

=== Winter Storm Warning for Portion of Forecast Area ===

The Winter Weather Advisory has been upgraded to a Winter Storm Warning for the northern portion of the forecast area, including most of our southern Indiana counties, and north-central Kentucky. The Winter Weather Advisory has also been expanded southward by a row of counties.

A quick-hitting clipper system is currently to our northwest this afternoon, but is expected to arrive by this evening, bringing significant snowfall to areas highlighted by the winter headlines. Deep moisture will overspread our region around or after sunset, leading to an initial onset of mixed p-types as sfc temps could be hovering around the freezing mark. However, will expect a quick change over to all snow shortly after onset as wet bulbing helps us drop below freezing.

We'll see the sfc low move across Missouri this evening, extending a warm front to the east and across the TN Valley. This wave will bring a good amount of forcing overhead, with model guidance showing healthy mid-level frontogenesis band moving across the area in a well- saturated profile. Wind profiles indicate speeds increasing and weak directional veering with height, and combined with the vicinity of the warm front just to our southwest, will support CSI and stronger EPV. With this in mind, combined with deep saturation through the DGZ, we will likely see some heavy snow bands set up across the area, potentially seeing snow rates of 0.5-0.75 in/hour, with perhaps a few bands overachieving and closer to dumping 1 in/hr, especially for our counties in the warning.

After the clipper departs our area tomorrow morning, expect a drier trend for the rest of Friday and into Friday night.

===== Snow Amounts Tonight =====

Forecast snowfall amounts were increased slightly with the afternoon package, with a widespread 3-5 inches expected within the warning area. This area will also have the longest residence time for snowfall, which further adds to the confidence of significant snow amounts in our northeast. In the advisory zone, generally 1-3 inches are forecast, though the southern edge of the headline features the lowest confidence.

Still expect to see a very sharp gradient on the southern end with the warm front cutting into our southwestern CWA. This poses a bust scenario for some of those counties on the edge of the advisory, such as Hardin (KY) or Perry (IN), which could see a dusting to 2" spread south to north across the county. We have to draw the line somewhere, and regardless of where that is, there will be some folks that are under the advisory but will likely end up with little to no snow. In other words, some southern locations could get left out of snow, while the northern part of the county sees an inch or two.

Snow ratios will likely range between 12:1 to 15:1, with the colder temps to our northeast resulting in the higher ratios.

===== Probabilistic Snow Amounts =====

Location Chance of >1" Chance of >2" Chance of >4"

Louisville 94% 77% 35%

Lexington 96% 87% 50%

Frankfort 96% 85% 51%

Madison, IN 98% 95% 64%

Salem, IN 97% 93% 67%

Jasper, IN 92% 72% 55%

Of our population centers, Salem and Madison, IN have the best chance in our CWA of exceeding 6 inches, with roughly a 30% chance.

===== Potential Impacts =====

Majority of the snow is expected to fall overnight, which will help some with limiting overall impacts. However, we will see lingering snow through the morning for the Bluegrass region as the clipper pulls away. We'll still likely see at least some minor impacts, per the WPC WSSI, with some travel impacts and inconveniences expected for the Friday morning commute as road crews work diligently to clear their routes.

LONG TERM /SATURDAY NIGHT THROUGH THURSDAY/

Issued at 400 PM EST Thu Dec 11 2025

===== Friday Night - Weekend =====

Dry weather is expected for the beginning of the long term period, though it will be short-lived as we await another quick-hitting clipper system to drop more snow across our northern CWA. We start out dry for Saturday as well, with considerable temp spreads north to south across the area. Our southern IN and north-central KY counties are forecast to remain below freezing, perhaps some in the upper 20s, while our Lake Cumberland area could see mid to upper- 40s.

As we head into the afternoon and evening time frame, another quick- hitting clipper system looks to put down another swath of snow across our northern forecast area. Model guidance continues to indicate a similar track to the first clipper system, with PoPs ramping up for Saturday afternoon and peaking during the evening hours. The clipper is expected to quickly exit our area by early Sunday morning.

Best chances for advisory level snowfall will be north of I-64, with potential for 1-3 inches. It is also worth mentioning that we won't see much melting between clipper systems, as mentioned in the previous discussion, so we could end up with some considerable snow depths when combining the snowpack of two systems by Sunday morning.

Arctic high pressure will build across the Midwest and Ohio Valley on Sunday, bringing the coldest air of the season so far and amplified by the fresh snowpack. Sunday morning lows are currently forecast to crash hard into the single digits for areas north of the KY Pkwys, with southern IN counties the best chance for 0F temps. These temps, combined with NW sfc winds around 10 mph will allow wind chills to drop to subzero for a large portion, with perhaps 10 below zero wind chills across southern IN. These values would support a Cold Weather Advisory for at least some, if not all of our CWA Sunday morning.

After highs mostly in the teens on Sunday, Sunday night into Monday low may even be colder with high pressure settling near or over top of us. Looking for most lows in the 0 to 10 above range, with perhaps some negative values across our north. The good news is that winds will be lighter with the surface high near or over us. Still, may need to keep a Cold Weather Advisory going through Monday morning as well.

===== Monday Night - Wednesday =====

Dry conditions continue through early week with the arctic high pressure losing hold by mid week. Temps will begin to slowly moderate during this time, but conditions will stay dry at least through Tuesday night. By Wednesday, some cold rain showers could return by overall confidence is low by this time period. Looking for highs in the 35 to 45 degree range on Tuesday, and more solidly in the 40s by Wednesday.

AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z SATURDAY/

Issued at 1229 AM EST Fri Dec 12 2025

We're in the middle of a snow event across most of the TAF sites, with BWG the only site largely being spared. Otherwise, conditions are IFR at the other 4 northern sites either for ceilings, vis, or both. These conditions are expected to persist for much of the overnight, perhaps showing some slight improvement around sunrise, and then gradual improvement back into the MVFR range by mid to late morning. Snow is ended by this time, however we likely keep low MVFR to MVFR range ceilings around for the remainder of this TAF cycle. Surface winds will mostly be light and variable with the surface low/clipper system passing through the area.

LMK WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES

KY...Winter Storm Warning until 10 AM EST this morning for KYZ030>038-040>043-048-049. Winter Weather Advisory until 10 AM EST /9 AM CST/ this morning for KYZ023>029-039-045>047-053>057-061>067-074- 076>078-081-082. IN...Winter Storm Warning until 10 AM EST this morning for INZ076>079-090>092. Winter Weather Advisory until 10 AM EST /9 AM CST/ this morning for INZ083-084-089.


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