textproduct: Twin Cities
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
- Seasonable high temperatures (40s & 50s) through the end of the work week, with a chance for 60 on Wednesday.
- Small scattered rain chances return late tonight, with better chances and coverage Wednesday afternoon.
- A warm, humid, and stormy pattern takes shape this weekend and early next week.
DISCUSSION
Issued at 1252 PM CDT Tue Apr 7 2026
Mid to high level cloud cover is dampening the ability to warm up this afternoon, with most struggling to hit 40. As such, have bumped down forecast highs a degree or two into the low 40s to upper 30s. Today and Thursday will be the coolest days of the period, with a brief warm up tomorrow and a more prolonged warm up arriving Friday. A few chances for light precip exist this week. The first chance is less certain and only showing up on a few CAMs in the form of very scattered light rain. The period of development is short, and there is an increasing chance the profile will never saturate and things stay dry. PoPs were reduced to 10-15% at most. Winds will pick up slightly across southern Minnesota due to the increased mixing and we blended in some higher gusts than what the NBM was forecasting to reflect this. The second, more likely, chance for precipitation arrives Wednesday afternoon and evening as a cold front passes through. A ball of potential vorticity will travel along the international border, this is where the heavier precip is expected. However, a tendril of vorticity will stretch south to the MN/IA border, bringing the precip chances down into our neck of the woods. The front should pass through midday, with a SW-NE oriented and of rain most likely between noon and 5PM (earlier in western MN, later in western WI). QPF will be light, if even measurable, on the order of a tenth or less. Wednesday night and Thursday will be cooler on the back side of this front.
This weekend continues to look impressive as increased low- level Gulf moisture is forecast to spread across a large portion of the central CONUS. Ample moisture with broad troughing across the western US and a building ridge to the east will increase the odds for heavy precipitation this weekend into early next week. PWAT values could be anywhere from 200-300 percent of normal. It's uncertain how persistent or strong showers and storms will be during this period, though it is very likely that any given storm will be an efficient rain producer.
The average monthly precipitation for April in the Twin Cities is 2.91" and we are at 1.39" through April 6th. With this weekend's rain, it's looking likely we'll have at least a normal month of precipitation, if not above average. For Eau Claire and St Cloud, the respective monthly averages are 3.08" and 2.61" (Eau Claire is at 1.40" and St Cloud is at 0.89" through April 6th).
AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z THURSDAY/
Issued at 1234 AM CDT Wed Apr 8 2026
Biggest change for the TAFs was an overall increase for winds and gusts throughout the period. Many sites are gusting between 25-30 kts already and the strongest gusts are yet to come this morning, especially for southern MN. Winds will shift from the SE/S to SW/W as a low pressure moves east along the US/Canada border.
Cigs will hover around 3-5k feet, though the latest satellite trends may suggest we will have more clearing than expected to start the period. Mostly MVFR and VFR conditions are expected, though AXN may have a few hours of IFR cigs this morning.
There will be an early chance for light rain in EAU this morning, though the latest trend is looking drier for them. An additional round of light rain will be tied to the frontal passage from western MN this morning to western WI by the afternoon. The best saturation will be to the north and east, so AXN, STC, and EAU currently have the best chance for rain with this round. Impacts will be limited as any rain that falls will be light.
KMSP...Confidence has decreased for the window of MVFR ceilings at the start of the period. We may see redevelopment of the lower clouds, otherwise mostly VFR conditions will persist through the day. There is a low chance for light rain tied to the frontal passage. Winds will likely remain gusty through about 00z this evening as they shift from the SE to the SW/W.
/OUTLOOK FOR KMSP/ THU...VFR. Wind WNW 10-15kts. FRI...VFR. Wind NW 5kts. SAT...VFR, chc MVFR/-SHRA late. Wind SE 15-20kts.
MPX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
MN...None. WI...None.
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