textproduct: Chicago
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
- Warm and humid conditions will continue through Saturday.
- Smoke persists across portions of northeast Illinois and northwest Indiana through Friday morning.
- A few showers and storms are possible this afternoon, with scattered coverage expected on Friday. Additional storms may develop along a cold front Saturday, some of which may be capable of strong to locally damaging wind gusts.
DISCUSSION
Issued at 251 PM CDT Thu Jul 16 2026
Through Saturday:
Wildfire smoke from fires in Ontario and northern Minnesota descended into portions of northern Illinois and northwest Indiana early this morning resulting in unhealthy to hazardous air quality conditions. Visibility reductions within this smoke layer have been as low as 1/2 to 2 miles, lowest across far northeastern Illinois and along the lakeshore. There has been some slight improvement on the southwest edge of the smoke layer in part due to diurnal mixing this afternoon. Hi-res near- surface smoke models suggest the smoke layer may slosh back farther inland into this evening though with a reinforcing lake breeze leading to continue hazardous air quality through the overnight hours. Low-level flow will turn southwesterly during the day on Friday which may help lift the smoke layer out of the area and improve air quality gradually through the day.
Diurnal cumulus has developed this afternoon over much of the area south of the area of greatest concentrations of smoke, currently south of a Harvard to Chicago to Valparaiso line. Can't rule out a stray shower or storm within this region of cumulus between now and sunset, though a locally higher potential exists within a low-level convergence axis along a Dixon to Morris to Fowler line. In addition to a few lightning strikes and localized downpours, brief funnel cloud also can't be fully ruled out. Severe weather is not expected and the majority of the area is expected to remain dry.
Looking ahead to Friday, temperatures are forecast to warm into the mid 80s to around 90, warmest in the Chicago metro. Increasing cloud cover and shower/storm coverage, particularly south of I-80 initially, may lead to slightly lower temperatures in those areas. If coverage ends up lower, temperatures and heat indices may end up higher than currently forecast. Hi-res guidance continues to be rather sparse on coverage compared to some of the global guidance. However, forecast soundings are largely uncapped during the afternoon coinciding with a weak mid-level vort pivoting into the area. Have accordingly included "scattered" coverage wording in the latest forecast. Primary hazards with any storms include lightning, gusty winds, and torrential rainfall rates (tropical PWATs to 2"+) which could lead to localized flooding.
Hot and humid conditions continue on Saturday, potentially slightly warmer than Friday, with highs in upper 80s to lower 90s and peak heat indices in the 95 to 105 range. A mid-upper shortwave and associated surface cold front is expected to sweep across the area in the afternoon-early evening timeframe. Ample instability in place ahead of the front (MLCAPE around 3000 J/kg) will be supportive of scattered thunderstorm development along the front as it moves across the area. Given increasing mid-upper flow with the approaching wave, the strongest storms may be capable of gusty to locally damaging wind gusts (severe threat level 1 of 5).
We will also have to monitor smoke levels in the wake of the front into Saturday evening, as it may bring additional smoke back to the surface.
Petr
Sunday through Thursday:
Sunday looks like a nice day with seasonable temperatures in the mid 80s (a bit cooler near the lake) and more comfortable humidity levels. A stronger synoptic-scale trough will then move across the region Monday afternoon and evening, sending another cold front through the area. Saturday's front will only send the low-level moist axis into Iowa, so this may not have much of a problem surging back east across the forecast area on Monday. Dewpoints are progged to rise back into the mid to upper 70s ahead of the front while a plume of steeper mid-level lapse rates build in aloft. While capping could pose a challenge to convective development, significant flow through the column, coupled with building instability suggests this will be a period to monitor closely for more of a strong to severe weather threat in the region. Depending on timing, the threat for storms could continue into Tuesday.
Carlaw
AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z SATURDAY/
Issued at 123 PM CDT Thu Jul 16 2026
Key Messages:
- Visibility reductions from wildfire smoke will persist through the mid-late morning tomorrow.
- Isolated showers and storms remain possible this afternoon, mainly near RFD and DPA.
- Widely scattered showers and storms are forecasted during the afternoon tomorrow.
This afternoon, the terminals remain cloaked in an expansive veil of near-surface wildfire smoke originating from western Ontario and northern Minnesota. While notable improvements in visibility may briefly occur at RFD and/or DPA over the next few hours, greater smoke concentrations near and over Lake Michigan will surge farther inland later this afternoon and evening behind a sharpening lake breeze and will likely allow IFR to low-end MVFR visibilities to persist at all five of our TAF sites all the way through tonight. Couldn't rule out visibilities dipping under 1SM in spots as well based on upstream observations, but don't have enough confidence in this outcome occurring at any particular TAF site at this time to formally highlight this possibility in the TAFs. High-resolution smoke forecast models indicate that conditions should quickly improve during the mid-late morning tomorrow as low-level flow turns more westerly/southwesterly and shunts the smoke plume eastward as diurnal mixing commences.
In addition, isolated showers and storms may pop up later this afternoon along the lake breeze and/or a differential heating boundary demarcated by the western periphery of the smoke plume. This activity is favored to remain away from the terminals, but still couldn't rule out needing to add some sort of shower or thunder mention to the TAFs -- particularly at RFD and DPA (where the chances of showers and storms occurring this afternoon stand at about 20-25% at TAF issuance time). Another chance for diurnal showers and storms exists at the terminals tomorrow afternoon. The coverage of this activity is likely to be greater than today's shower/storm coverage, but may still only be widely scattered near and north of I-80. Nevertheless, the chances for showers and storms affecting the terminals tomorrow afternoon appear to be high enough to warrant the introduction of a PROB30 group for TSRA in the ORD and MDW TAFs during this time frame.
Ogorek
LOT WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
IL...Air Quality Alert until midnight CDT Friday night for ILZ003- ILZ004-ILZ005-ILZ006-ILZ008-ILZ010-ILZ011-ILZ012-ILZ013- ILZ019-ILZ020-ILZ021-ILZ103-ILZ104-ILZ105-ILZ106-ILZ107- ILZ108.
IN...Air Quality Alert until midnight CDT Friday night for INZ001- INZ002-INZ010-INZ011.
Air Quality Alert from midnight tonight to 1 AM EDT Saturday for INZ019.
LM...Dense Smoke Advisory until 4 PM CDT Friday for the IL and IN nearshore waters.
IMPORTANT This is an independent project and has no affiliation with the National Weather Service or any other agency. Do not rely on this website for emergency or critical information: please visit weather.gov for the most accurate and up-to-date information available.
textproduct.us is built and maintained by Joshua Thayer.