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
- A band of light rain showers pushing through this afternoon.
- Colder than normal through Tuesday with warmer temperatures returning Wednesday. Several rain chances arrive with the warmup, centered on next weekend.
DISCUSSION
Issued at 216 PM CDT Sun Apr 5 2026
Another upper level disturbance is sliding southeast across the Upper Midwest this afternoon. A band of rain showers is accompanying this feature. The band is narrow and shouldn't last long with how quickly the wave will swing through. Some weak instability across southern MN may allow an isolated storm to develop late this afternoon. High pressure will build in tonight and Monday, bringing what should be the coldest air for the rest of the season. Highs will only be in the 20s or 30s Monday. Lows Monday night should drop into the teens area wide.
The pattern midweek and beyond will feature the polar jet returning to Canada and a broad trough across the western U.S. Warm air advection will begin Tuesday as a system tracks east along the U.S./Canadian border. Rain and snow showers may break out Tuesday night in advance of a warm front/occluded boundary. By Wednesday, strong southerly flow ahead of a cold front will bring much milder air northward with highs in the 60s. Additional showers are possible throughout Wednesday and Wednesday evening until the cold front works through, but amounts will be light.
Finer scale details beyond this point are more uncertain. Ensemble spread remains large, but generally next weekend continues to show a good signal for an active pattern to return. Several various disturbances may interact with a quasi- stationary boundary from the central Plains to Upper Midwest and Great Lakes to bring chances for showers and storms. Temperatures will also trend warmer, possibly 70s to low 80s, if the front sets up to the north and we can find some dry hours.
AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z TUESDAY/
Issued at 647 PM CDT Sun Apr 5 2026
A weak cold front dropping south this evening, responsible for the now-passed swath of rain showers this afternoon, will bring added cloud cover this evening through Monday morning. Some MVFR decks are expected from this evening through tonight, potentially as long as through sunrise Monday morning. As high pressure enters the region from the northwest midday Monday, skies will partially clear out, leading to a return of VFR conditions. Breezy/gusty NW winds can be expected throughout this TAF duration, not really settling back below 10kts until Monday evening when winds also veer to NE.
KMSP...VFR to start and remain in place through the early morning hours although ceilings around 4kft will develop late this evening. MVFR ceilings then expected prior to sunrise and will last throughout the morning push, followed by partial clearing from around midday onward. Breezy/gusty winds will continue throughout this duration, but will come from a solid NW direction, thus necessitating keeping ops on the 30s through Monday evening.
/OUTLOOK FOR KMSP/ TUE...VFR. Wind SE 5-10kts...increasing to 10-15kts late. WED...MVFR/-SHRA likely, IFR possible. Wind S winds 10-15G25kts becoming W. THU...VFR. Winds WNW 5-10kts.
MPX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
MN...None. WI...None.
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