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
- Isolated storms ongoing this afternoon over parts of southeastern MN and western WI.
- Increasing signal for a potential MCS and attendant severe weather and heavy rain risk late Tuesday into Wednesday.
- Dry weather with near normal temperatures expected Thursday through Saturday.
DISCUSSION
Issued at 136 PM CDT Sun Jul 5 2026
It's a much quieter afternoon to end the weekend, with only a few isolated showers sporadically popping up across west- central WI and southeast MN. Regional satellite shows the area of storms and increased moisture wedged under the building ridge axis that's keeping much of us under weak subsidence. The nice weather under this ridge will continue into Monday before an eastward propagating cold front influences thunderstorm development across the Dakotas during the afternoon and evening. Thinking remains largely the same with this system... the line of storms will attempt to push east into Minnesota, but with no LLJ to help sustain them, it should wane off relatively quickly overnight. As a result, the latest NBM PoPs are beginning to converge towards a solution for Monday night where the line is only able to move into parts of central MN before falling apart. PoPs have trended down and are generally capped around 30-50 percent.
The remnants of these storms will set up a boundary for additional storm development Tuesday afternoon and evening. Right now, that boundary is favored to stall across central MN, but it really just depends on how those Monday night storms evolve. Wherever this boundary sets up will be primed for a healthy amount of rain, especially if you factor in the Monday night convection. The latest WPC QPF paints a broad footprint of 1-2" along the boundary, from Monday night through Tuesday night. Given PWAT anomalies could be near 170-200 percent of normal (for July), it is very realistic to expect some areas could receive well over 2" in that timeframe as well. There will also likely be an environment conducive for the development of a more organized convective system during the second half of the day Tuesday south of the boundary. A strengthening LLJ accompanied with steep lapse rates and increasing dewpoints should support this forward propagating MCS, though the exact details will be influenced by sub-synoptic developments with low predictability this far out. The "double slight" remains in place for both the severe and excessive rainfall risks.
Things quiet down again after the rain clears out Wednesday, with a relatively weak jet aloft and low amplitude ridging. Temperatures and dewpoints are expected to come down a bit for the Wednesday through Friday timeframe with low precipitation chances unless any sort of subtle kink in the heights develops on any given day. It continues to look like ridging will dominate the western half of the CONUS heading into the week of July 13th, and it will just be a matter of how far east the edge of the ridge spreads to determine how much we warm up again.
AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z TUESDAY/
Issued at 542 PM CDT Sun Jul 5 2026
Very little changes made to this TAF with VFR expected the entire period. A few high clouds will be present tonight with few to possibly scattered diurnal cumulus clouds near 5000 feet during Monday. Variable/light east-southeasterly winds tonight turn south-southeasterly mid-Monday morning with speeds increasing to 5-10 knots.
KMSP...No additional concerns.
/OUTLOOK FOR KMSP/ TUE...VFR, chc pm -SHRA. Wind SW 5-10kts. WED...MVFR/-SHRA likely, chc IFR/-TSRA. Wind SW bcmng NW 10-15kts. THU...VFR. Wind NE 5-10kts.
MPX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
MN...None. WI...None.
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