textproduct: Salt Lake City

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

- Cooler temperatures Thursday will again begin to warm through Friday and Saturday, reaching around 5-10F above seasonal normals, increasing further Monday through next week, reaching 10-15 degrees above normal with Moderate HeatRisk by Wednesday.

- Gusty winds may develop Friday afternoon across the Uinta Basin and Eastern Valleys alongside very dry relative humidities, leading to localized critical fire weather conditions.

- Increasing moisture over southern Utah will bring a few afternoon showers and thunderstorms over the higher terrain with the potential for isolated dry lightning Saturday and Sunday. Increasing winds Sunday into Monday will also increase the fire danger over southern Utah.

DISCUSSION

With a dry cold front largely through the region and dissipating with daytime mixing this morning, seeing temperatures 5-15F cooler than yesterday and expect this to reflect in the daytime highs in all but the warmest locations (Washington County) where temperatures will once again crest 100F+ this afternoon. Overall, this relief is expected to be short lived, with upper level temps gradually warming Friday and more significantly through the weekend into next week. As highs climb towards 93-95 degrees on the Wasatch Front and 105 in St. George by Tuesday/ Wednesday, risk of heat related illness will greatly increase. In fact, there is upwards of a 90% chance of HeatRisk reaching the "moderate" category (greatly affecting those sensitive to heat and those without access to adequate cooling/ hydration) and around a 15-20% chance of reaching the "Major" category (affecting a majority of the population).

A relative lull in upper level winds and increasing stability under building heights will also give some relief across the region from gusty winds that have been driving recent fire weather concerns. By Friday, an amplifying trough will begin to affect the overhead flow, putting much of the forecast area into a warm southwest flow regime, and driving surface temperatures back above climatological norms. While conditions will remain generally mild area-wide, the Uinta Basin and Eastern Valleys could see afternoon wind gusts pushing 20-35 mph in isolated areas with single digit relative humidities. While not expected to be widespread enough to drive impact headlines, this will be an area to keep an eye on.

In addition, this southwest flow will be able to tap into some available moisture in the mid and upper portion of the column and increase PWATs for the southern third of the state over the weekend. Ensemble means put total column water around 0.4-0.6 in, with a few outlier members from the EPS suggesting PWATs could reach as high as 1.1 in (upwards of 200-215 percent of normal). That said, both the current state of the lower atmosphere being so dry as well as the majority of the moisture in the source region being elevated would suggest high- based convection and more of a wind/dry lightning threat than a flooding threat late Saturday into early Sunday. If trends continue to move towards the more moist end of the spread, or the high resolution CAMs begin to suggest moistening of the lower atmosphere, this will warrant greater attention in the coming days. At this time, at least an isolated threat of flash flooding should be anticipated with the thunderstorm potential over slot canyons, dry washes, and recent burn scars.

REST OF UTAH AND SOUTHWEST WYOMING

VFR conditions prevail for all regional terminals under clear skies across the airspace. A dry cold front will continue to move south across the airspace through early Thursday morning. Gusty north to northwesterly flow will accompany the frontal passage, with gusts 20-30 kts expected for most regional terminals across central and southern Utah. Otherwise, lighter winds prevail through the remainder of Thursday except KSGU, where canyon gap winds may keep gusts elevated into the late morning.

FIRE WEATHER, Issued 411 AM MDT Thu Jun 11 2026

A dry cold front will wash out across southern Utah as the trough associated with it shifts east of the region. Temperatures will cool behind the front Thursday, but daytime highs areawide will then return to around 5 to 10 degrees above normal Friday onward. Ridging will increase influence across the region during this time, allowing daytime winds and gusts to be much more modest than previous days. Conditions will remain quite dry with humidity values in the teens to single digits alongside poor overnight recoveries, supporting continued elevated to locally critical fire weather conditions where winds do increase sufficiently. There will be a brief minor incursion of moisture to southern Utah over the weekend. This should result in some isolated daytime convective development, particularly across the higher terrain. Wetting rain chances look fairly minimal, but activity that does develop will be capable of producing lightning and gusty erratic outflow winds. Moisture then once again decreases into next week, with little to no precipitation chances currently noted.

SLC WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES

UT...None. WY...None.


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