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

- Slight chance for light snow northeast of about I-90 tonight. Turning blustery Tuesday with a small chance for a few snow showers.

- Cold conditions continue through the week with mainly dry conditions. Monitoring another potential for lake effect snow during the Thursday night - Saturday timeframe.

DISCUSSION

Issued at 213 AM CST Mon Jan 26 2026

A sprawling 1040-ish mb arctic high building across the Great Plains has brought an end to our accumulating snowfall and at the same time is ushering in a renewed push of cold air. Temperatures at this hour are wandering down below zero across interior northern Illinois and into the single digits above zero elsewhere. While low-level cold advection is ongoing, a persistent region of stratus across far northeast Illinois and northwest Indiana is muting the temperature fall a bit. Based on latest satellite and guidance trends, it does look like we'll largely lose this area of cloud cover through daybreak or so, but the delayed scattering may result in slightly "warmer" temperatures in spots. Regardless, a steady northwesterly breeze around 15 mph will result in morning wind chills in the 20 to 25 below range northwest of about I-55 and in the 15 to 20 below range elsewhere (NW Indiana in particular). No changes planned to the current Cold Weather Advisory.

Quiet but cold conditions are expected today as shortwave ridging briefly builds in overhead. A fast-moving and intense clipper system will push across the Upper Great Lakes tonight and Tuesday morning. Mid-level heights falls on the order of 120 meters/12 hours are forecast to spread across parts of northern Wisconsin and lower Michigan, highlighting the robust nature of large scale forcing accompanying this system. A significant layer of dry air is forecast to be in place across the local region, however, which should generally limit the snowfall threat across our area. That said, forecast soundings reveal effective saturation occurring down to around or under 850 mb late tonight during a brief window across the northeast half of the CWA, and the latest GFS is now cranking out a little QPF north and east of I-90. Given the intense forcing, have elected to introduce a slight chance for snow late tonight/early Tuesday morning in this region. The window for any snow will likely be brief (2-3 hours or less), and it's still possible dry air wins out, but did not feel comfortable with a completely precip-free forecast given the dynamics at play.

Increasing warm advection in advance of this system will facilitate a gradual uptick in southwesterly winds this evening and overnight. This in turn will eventually result in steady to slowly-rising temperatures overnight. Prior to this, air temperatures could briefly fall back into the negative single digits in spots this evening, particularly across our far southeast locales closer to the deeper snow pack which, when combined with the increasing winds, may result in wind chills briefly as cold as 20 below. Given the currently-expected brief nature of these wind chills, did not issue another cold headline given the anticipated "warming" overnight and through daybreak Tuesday. With the increasing winds, some patchy blowing snow may occur in open/rural areas within the deeper snowpack. It's possible that things have started to crust over a bit by tonight, but did add some patchy blowing snow (probably will be more like low drifting) wording to the grids for areas south of the Kankakee River where reports of 3 to 4 inches were commonplace from yesterday's system.

A reinforcing cold front will sweep through the area during the morning on Tuesday. Increasing cold advection may mute the diurnal temperature rise, and it's possible our current highs are a smidge too warm depending on the magnitude of cold advection. Increasing 0-1 km lapse rates should result in an expansion of low stratus through the morning and into the afternoon. Did contemplate adding some chances for snow showers, but have held off for now given the still marginal-looking nature to progged boundary layer moisture, which looks better across southern Wisconsin. Noting that the recent ECMWF is depicting some NW-SE oriented streaks of light QPF into the region during this timeframe, so something to consider in future forecast issuances given significant DCVA overhead.

On Wednesday, the next disturbance is slated to press across the region. The trend over the last few model cycles has been towards a bit of a drier and farther south outcome, with less modeled precip. Still somewhat skeptical of a completely dry outcome given the upper jet forcing and degree of mid-level saturation, but given the very limited signal across the ensemble suite, have left the NBM-delivered dry conditions as is.

Beyond this, the signal for an expansive upper trough cutting south and westward across the Great Lakes continues to grow in the guidance suite towards the end of the week. With this occurring as another 1050s mb arctic high builds southward across the north-central CONUS, the potential for another round of lake effect snow is evident from about Thursday night through Saturday. With ice cover likely to expand with time, it's a bit unclear how this might impact surface fluxes, although latest GLERL ice forecasts indicate ice coverage likely won't extend beyond 15-20 miles, with a wide open fetch available along the long axis of the lake. With the colder lake temperatures, thermodynamics are not off the charts, but certainly more than sufficient for intense lake effect with surface-850 delta Ts near 20 C and lake-induced ELs just under 9-10 kft. Way too much uncertainty at this time range to make any adjustments to the blended slight chance PoPs, but this will be a period to keep a close eye on.

Carlaw

AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z WEDNESDAY/

Issued at 1136 AM CST Mon Jan 26 2026

Main Concerns:

- Gusty winds may cause shallow blowing and drifting snow at Chicago area TAF sites tonight through Tuesday.

- There is a small chance for a period of light snow overnight/early Tuesday.

Expect mostly clear skies until this evening with occasionally gusty westerly winds becoming more southwesterly with time. Later this evening, southwest winds are forecast to markedly increase, accompanied by gusts to around 25 kt. If gusts are less frequent, LLWS criteria may be met. However, felt that the forecast wind speed and directional change up to about 2kft are marginal enough to withhold LLWS mention from this TAF issuance.

More notably, with new fluffy snow this weekend at Chicago metro TAF sites, the gusty southwest winds overnight may cause visibility reductions and snow blowing over runways from shallow blowing and drifting snow. During this time, there's a slight (20-30%) chance for flurries or a period of light snow. A cold front will shift across the terminals early Tuesday, shifting winds to gusty west-northwesterly (25-30 kt gusts), and continue any BLSN issues. Should impactful BLSN issues materialize, west to east runways will be more susceptible overnight and then north to south runways becoming more susceptible during the day on Tuesday.

Finally, VFR CIGs will continue until potential brief dips to MVFR overnight, but prevailing MVFR CIG conditions should hold off until Tuesday morning, with some uncertainty on timing.

Castro

HYDROLOGY

Issued at 230 PM CST Fri Jan 23 2026

River gauges, reports from local officials, and reports from trained ice spotters continue to indicate a few ice jams across the area due to the significant increase in river ice over recent days. With continued cold weather into next week, conditions will remain favorable for river ice formation. While no widespread flooding is expected, localized ice jams may occur.

- NWS Chicago

LOT WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES

IL...None. IN...None. LM...Small Craft Advisory until 6 PM CST Tuesday for the IL and IN nearshore waters.


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