textproduct: Little Rock
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
Issued at 151 AM CDT Thu Apr 23 2026
- Seasonably warm temperatures expected to continue through early next week.
- Severe weather potential begins Thursday Night/Friday Morning and will persist through Monday.
- Multiple rounds of strong to severe thunderstorms will be possible over the period of Thursday Night through Monday Evening across the state of Arkansas.
DISCUSSION
Issued at 151 AM CDT Thu Apr 23 2026
THURSDAY (TODAY):
In the upper lvls, a ridge axis will be positioned over Arkansas with a closed low positioned over southwestern Canada and shortwave pattern approaching the Central Plains region of the CONUS. At the sfc, a parent sfc low pressure center is progged to be across the northern Plains region of the CONUS with a cold front extending southward to a secondary low pressure center positioned across the vicinity of the Oklahoma/Texas Panhandle with a dryline extending southward across Oklahoma and Texas.
Latest CAMS guidance depicts a situation where strong to severe thunderstorms across Oklahoma and Kansas are anticipated to develop into an MCS which is projected to enter the state of Arkansas late Thursday night into the early morning hours on Friday. The main hazards associated with the MCS would be damaging wind gusts, large hail, and a few tornadoes cannot be ruled out. The timing of arrival of the MCS into western Arkansas is expected during a time of limited instability across the state overall, but the MCS will be in an environment across the western half of the state with plentiful amounts of shear and instability to lead to a few severe thunderstorms. See more below as the MCS is progged to continue tracking across Arkansas on Friday morning.
FRIDAY/SATURDAY
In the upper lvls, a series of shortwave pulses will move over Arkansas with otherwise nearly zonal to west-northwesterly flow over the state. At the sfc, a cold front moves into Arkansas from the northwest and will track from northwest to southeast across the state.
Expect on Friday morning, a decaying MCS to be moving across the state. The size and speed of this activity will be paramount in the determination of, if any strong to severe thunderstorms develop across the state on Friday afternoon into Friday evening. If the activity is sluggish in exiting the CWA and state, then instability will be limited as the atmosphere will struggle to become unstable again to support additional development of strong to severe thunderstorms. However, the converse situation is that the MCS moves quickly across the CWA and state allowing the atmosphere to become unstable via warming temperatures and low-level moisture return. If the converse situation comes to fruition, then strong to severe thunderstorms capable of all hazards will be possible, but large hail and damaging wind gusts will be the primary concerns, a secondary hazard will be a tornado or two.
Into Saturday, strong to severe thunderstorm development will be highly dependent on what does or does not develop hours prior as the question of whether storms attempt to develop in a parameter space that is stable or unstable. A signal does exist for strong to severe thunderstorm potential on Saturday afternoon into Saturday night. Confidence is a tad lower for severe weather development on Saturday, but if the atmosphere can become unstable ahead of the frontal boundary in the form of a cold front which be moving across the state throughout the day, then strong to severe thunderstorms cannot be discounted.
SUNDAY/MONDAY:
In the upper lvls, shortwave pulses continue over Arkansas with a tad more digging or definition within the flow pattern for each shortwave. At the sfc, a boundary stalls across southern Arkansas/northern Louisiana on Sunday and retreats back northward as a warm front opening up a warm sector as a secondary cold front approaches Arkansas from the northwest.
On Sunday, another potential for the remnants of a MCS will exist late Sunday evening into Sunday night. A few strong to severe thunderstorms will be possible with any activity that does remain intact out of Kansas and Oklahoma moving into Arkansas. All hazards would be possible, but primary hazards would be damaging wind gusts and large hail. A secondary hazard would be the possibility of a tornado or two.
Into Monday, the warm front will retreat into the Mid-West region of the CONUS with an approaching cold front, thus opening up a favorable warm sector with ample heating and low level moisture. It is Monday which does look the best for severe weather as all hazards would be possible with any storm which develop on Monday afternoon into Monday evening.
TUESDAY/WEDNESDAY:
Rain chances will stick around, but the severe potential is expect to become near zero as the cold front moves through the state on Monday, but a return to southerly flow and a stationary boundary in the vicinity is anticipated by mid-week. Stay tuned to the latest forecast discussion as the focus has been really pinpointed towards Thursday (today) through Monday as the risk of severe weather will be possible each day.
AVIATION
(00Z TAFS) Issued at 632 PM CDT Thu Apr 23 2026
VFR with pockets of MVFR will persist through the remainder of the evening hours. Gusty south/southwest winds weaken overnight while continue to transport deeper moisture northward. Latest models brings in MVFR/IFR ceilings northward and impacts southern terminals as early as 07z, then central/northern terminals after 08z. Hi-res cams shows the leading line of thunderstorms ahead of a complex of embedded showers and thunderstorms entering NW Arkansas around 08z and impacting northern terminals as early as 09/10z. The showers and thunderstorms will bring strong gusty winds and MVFR/IFR ceilings. The leading line of thunderstorms with embedded complex storms are will impact central terminals around 14 or 15z with MVFR/IFR ceilings and gusty winds, then southern terminals around or after noon.
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS
Batesville AR 64 75 60 81 / 50 100 60 10 Camden AR 65 79 62 82 / 10 80 80 20 Harrison AR 61 76 57 79 / 80 90 30 10 Hot Springs AR 64 75 60 79 / 30 90 70 20 Little Rock AR 64 77 62 81 / 30 90 80 20 Monticello AR 65 80 63 82 / 10 80 90 30 Mount Ida AR 64 75 60 79 / 50 90 60 20 Mountain Home AR 61 76 56 80 / 70 90 30 10 Newport AR 66 75 62 80 / 30 90 60 20 Pine Bluff AR 65 78 63 80 / 20 80 90 30 Russellville AR 63 76 60 81 / 60 90 50 10 Searcy AR 63 76 59 81 / 30 90 70 20 Stuttgart AR 66 77 65 79 / 20 90 80 30
LZK WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
None.
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