textproduct: Melbourne

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 210 AM EST Wed Jan 28 2026

- Cold Morning Temperatures Through Thursday. A Freeze Warning, Cold Weather Advisory, and Frost Advisory have been issued for portions of east central Florida. Plan to wear extra layers as wind chills dip into the mid 20s to mid 30s.

- Rare, Significant Arctic Cold Outbreak Arrives Saturday Night. The current forecast calls for low temperatures in the 20s, along with wind chills in the teens, early Sunday morning. Many places should fall below freezing again on Monday morning.

- Increasing Potential For Strong Wind Gusts On Saturday. There is a 50-70% chance of peak wind gusts reaching 35-45 mph. Consider how adverse windy conditions on Saturday may affect your ability to make preparations for the cold arriving Saturday night. Dangerous gale conditions are expected to develop in the Atlantic.

DISCUSSION

Issued at 210 AM EST Wed Jan 28 2026

-----------Synoptic Overview-----------

Cold, continental high pressure has overtaken the Southeast and Florida early this morning. A broad trough sits aloft across the Eastern U.S. The Arctic jet stream, on the south side of a displaced lobe of the polar vortex, spans across the Great Lakes. Within the mid-latitude polar jet, a weak disturbance is approaching Florida from the Red River Valley, and another feature is pushing into the Pacific Northwest. Extremely dry air is in place through the troposphere, and H85 (5 kft) temps have fallen to around +4 deg C.

Guidance remains in relatively strong agreement with pattern evolution over the next few days. Through Friday, the weak disturbances in the polar jet will quickly cross the Lower 48 and traverse the base of the Eastern U.S. trough. A ridge over Western North America will expand poleward by Thursday, connecting with strong positive height anomalies over the Arctic. At the apex of the ridge, ensemble means show a wave break over Hudson Bay on Thursday, which should further dislodge the polar vortex and send it even deeper into the U.S. on Friday. This will introduce brief southwesterly flow aloft over Florida, ensuring a short period of thermal moderation to end the work week.

Any warming will be short-lived, as Florida remains threatened by a major cold air episode this weekend. As the Arctic jet gets shunted south of the Great Lakes, it will encounter enhanced polar and subtropical jet segments over the Southern tier and Gulf. Nearly all 27/12Z ensemble members depict phasing of the polar, subtropical, and Arctic jet streams, carving out a very deep H5 trough across the Southeast U.S. by Saturday. This is expected to spawn a nor'easter that develops near Florida before pulling up the East Coast. While there remain subtle disagreements with the depth and timing of the trough, the setup is well resolved.

Model fields have come into strong agreement, supporting a remarkable parameter space over Florida this weekend. For instance, NAEFS members indicate that H5 heights bottom out below the CFSR model climate on Saturday night across NE Florida. H85 temperatures as low as -8 to -10 deg C are also at or below the 30-year model climate. Finally, the latest check of the ECMWF Extreme Forecast Index shows MinT and MaxT values below -0.95, indicative of conditions approaching the extreme of the EPS model climate.

Behind the nor'easter, dense, cold Arctic high pressure will be diving into the Southern Plains, producing a strong pressure gradient over Florida as the low moves away. At its peak, H925 (2500 ft) winds are projected to reach 35-45 kt as the low lifts northward. The Arctic high reaches Florida by around Monday or Tuesday, but a lingering trough is favored across the Eastern U.S. through the middle of next week. While temperature moderation will commence, it will be slow to occur.

-------Sensible Weather & Impacts-------

Today - Friday...

With only moisture-starved disturbances passing near the state, chilly and quiet conditions persist. The overall forecast remains largely unchanged. Well below-normal temperatures continue to cause moderate impacts across east central Florida, especially in the overnight and morning hours.

For those venturing outdoors, early day wind chills will bite, reaching the mid 20s to low 30s both this morning and tomorrow for all but the southern Treasure Coast. A Cold Weather Advisory goes until 9 am this morning for most of the district, and another will be needed over the same areas, plus inland St Lucie Co., early Thursday. Bundle up in extra layers and check in on those who may not have access to adequate heat/shelter. Wind chills recover slightly on Friday morning, mostly in the mid 30s inland to low/mid 40s at the coast.

Lighter winds and dry air will allow for temperatures to plummet, prompting another bout of freezing temperatures tonight over portions of east central Florida. The Freeze Warning for the interior and all of Volusia Co. will expire at 9 am, but go into effect again for much of the same area late tonight, plus Okeechobee Co., but excluding Coastal Volusia Co. For Greater Orlando, freeze probabilities are 30% or less inside the bypass expressways, but outlying and exurban communities will have a 40-60% chance of a freeze. That risk jumps to 70-90% for areas like rural southern Osceola County. A Frost Advisory has also been issued east of the Freeze Warning for late tonight. Frost and/or freeze conditions will threaten tropical and annual plants - continue to protect them. For the latest hazards at your location, please visit weather.gov/mlb.

Despite a few clouds and more sunshine, highs today and Thursday only rebound into the upper 50s-upper 60s, warmest south. Friday will be a good day to do any outdoor preparations for this weekend's Arctic outbreak, as afternoon highs jump into the upper 60s and low 70s.

Weekend - Early Next Week...

...Threat Of Damaging Freeze, Arctic Cold Outbreak Continues To Increase Beginning Saturday Night...

A developing nor'easter is still favored by most, if not all, available guidance as we push into Saturday. This low will form very close to Florida before lifting into the Atlantic. As it passes by early Saturday, we still carry 30-50% chances for rain showers. Rainfall tallies still look on the light side. By late morning and into the afternoon, a cold front passes through the area. The initial impact will be a burst of strong west-northwest winds. A glance at model soundings suggested that peak wind gusts from 35-45 mph are on the table for Saturday late afternoon and evening as the low spins up offshore. Keep this in mind when considering when and how to protect any tender vegetation!

Winds veer slightly more out of the northwest on Saturday night, pushing Arctic air down the peninsula. Any warming influence from the Gulf is unlikely to reach east central Florida due to parcel trajectories originating from the Panhandle and points north. Daily record lows are anticipated on Sunday morning. Temperatures will only slowly moderate, with additional freezes anticipated on Monday, if not even Tuesday morning.

Extreme cold risks have remained consistent over the last several updates:

SUNDAY AM: There is a 60-90% chance of a hard freeze (<= 27 deg F) on Sunday morning for all areas except Martin County (20-50%). Much of east central Florida currently has a 70-90% chance of wind chills in the teens.

MONDAY AM: The risk for a hard freeze (<= 27 deg F) is 50-80% for many locations, except the immediate Space and Treasure Coasts where the probabilities are somewhat lower (30-60%). Bitterly cold wind chills are expected to persist, though with lighter winds (upper teens-mid 20s).

As mentioned above, another round of very cold temperatures is forecast on Tuesday morning.

For additional cold weather support, including probabilities and durations of specific temperatures for your location, visit weather.gov/mlb/coldsupport.

With a widespread freeze and extreme cold event now likely, residents, officials, and agricultural operations should begin considering how to prepare. Those with inadequate shelter or heat will be most affected. Exposed pipes may freeze, and some non- native plants and trees will succumb to the elements if not properly protected. The risk to non-cold-hardy plants and palms is much higher due to the wind-driven cold that is expected.

High temperatures on Sunday should fail to reach 50 degrees near and north of I-4, perhaps reaching the low 50s south of Melbourne. By Tuesday, most spots should return to the 60s.

MARINE

Issued at 210 AM EST Wed Jan 28 2026

High pressure over the Northwest Gulf nudges eastward today, briefly enhancing winds and producing poor boating conditions in the Gulf Stream tonight. A period of improved conditions is forecast as the high sits nearly overhead late Thursday into Friday. Low pressure is then expected to form near Florida by Friday night, exiting into the Atlantic on Saturday. This is forecast to become a strong nor'easter as it moves up the Eastern Seaboard. Dangerous gale conditions are anticipated by Saturday night in the wake of this storm.

NW winds subside to 10-15 kt this afternoon, then increase to 15-20 kt in the Gulf Stream tonight. By Thursday afternoon, winds decrease again to N 10 kt. Light west to southwest winds on Friday, 5-10 kt, increasing by Saturday morning to 15-20 kt. Gale-force gusts arriving by Saturday afternoon.

Seas generally 3-5 ft through tomorrow, except up to 6 ft in the Gulf Stream tonight. 2-3 ft seas on Friday, building rapidly by Saturday afternoon.

AVIATION

(12Z TAFs) Issued at 625 AM EST Wed Jan 28 2026

VFR conditions are forecast through the TAF period with N/NW wind flow 5-10 knots inland and 10-12 knots coast.

FIRE WEATHER

Issued at 210 AM EST Wed Jan 28 2026

Chilly, dry high pressure remains in firm control through the next couple of days. Fire-sensitive conditions continue today due to very low afternoon relative humidity readings (18-30%, except higher immediate coast) along with a north wind up to around 10 mph. Dispersion becomes good this afternoon.

On Thursday, an onshore wind component in the afternoon (N to NE 5-10 mph) will push the lowest RH readings deeper over the interior, 25-30% from Orlando to Okeechobee westward. Dispersion fair to good on Thursday.

Light winds are forecast on Friday, along with slightly higher RHs (35-50%). The next bout of much drier air arrives on Sunday.

PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS

DAB 58 35 60 42 / 0 0 0 0 MCO 60 36 64 43 / 0 0 0 0 MLB 62 38 64 48 / 0 0 0 0 VRB 63 36 66 48 / 0 0 0 0 LEE 58 33 62 40 / 0 0 0 0 SFB 59 35 63 41 / 0 0 0 0 ORL 59 36 63 43 / 0 0 0 0 FPR 64 35 67 47 / 0 0 0 0

MLB WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES

FL...Cold Weather Advisory until 9 AM EST this morning for FLZ041- 044>046-053-058-141-144-247-254-347-547-647.

Cold Weather Advisory from 2 AM to 9 AM EST Thursday for FLZ041- 044>046-053-058-141-144-247-254-259-347-547-647.

Freeze Warning until 9 AM EST this morning for FLZ041-044>046- 053-141-144.

Freeze Warning from midnight tonight to 9 AM EST Thursday for FLZ041-044>046-053-058-144.

Frost Advisory from midnight tonight to 9 AM EST Thursday for FLZ141-247-254-547.

AM...None.


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.