Area Forecast Discussion
389
FXUS63 KLSX 020917
AFDLSX
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Saint Louis MO
317 AM CST Mon Feb 2 2026
.KEY MESSAGES...
- There is a 20-40% chance of a light wintry mix over southeast
and east central Missouri into southwest and south central
Illinois late tonight into Tuesday.
- Temperatures will not be as cold as last week with highs in the
30 and 40s.
&&
.SHORT TERM... (Through Late Tuesday Afternoon)
Issued at 316 AM CST Mon Feb 2 2026
The light snow that affect the northern and eastern parts of the CWA
last evening has moved into Indiana along with the upper trough that
generated it. Temperatures early this morning are notably warmer
than the past few mornings even though they are in the 20s. The
latest surface analysis is showing a warm front over western
Missouri with a cold front moving southward across the upper
Midwest. The warm front will move through early in the day allowing
highs to climb higher than have in well over a week. Then the cold
front and additional clouds will move into CWA setting up a contrast
in temperatures from north to south this afternoon with highs
ranging from the middle 30s over the northern and eastern parts of
the CWA to the upper 40s over parts of southeast Missouri.
The weather will remain dry through late tonight before the next
shortwave moves southeast into the Midwest in the northwest flow
aloft. Low pressure will develop over southwest Missouri late
tonight and then move east into the lower Ohio Valley by Tuesday
morning. Models are showing some differences with how quickly the
precipitation develops over the CWA, with the NAM being more
aggressive developing light snow over the eastern CWA late tonight
and Tuesday morning whereas the other determistic models are mainly
dry over the area. Some of the CAMS are also showing signs of wintry
mix late tonight into tomorrow morning over southeast Missouri into
the eastern CWA which have slightly increased the HREF probabilities
for light snow and spotty light freezing rain in these areas. At
this point, have increase PoPs late tonight to 20% over the eastern
CWA where there is an increased signal for frontogenesis, and kept
with the 20-40% NBM PoPs tomorrow morning, but added WPC QPF which
added the potential for a dusting to 1/4" of snow over the eastern
CWA as well as trace icing for where there will be some spots of
light freezing rain on Tuesday morning over southeast Missouri and
southwest Illinois. Precipitation is expect to move out of southwest
Illinois on Tuesday afternoon. Lows tonight will be in the 20s with
highs on Tuesday back in the 30s except in southeast Missouri where
they will be in the lower 40s.
Britt
&&
.LONG TERM... (Tuesday Night through Sunday)
Issued at 316 AM CST Mon Feb 2 2026
Generally dry weather is expected from the middle of this week
through the weekend as the upper pattern goes through a slow
deamplification. A large surface high will move through the Midwest
from Wednesday into Thursday followed by a cold front moving south
through the area late in the week followed by another large high
over the weekend. The upper trough associated with the front will
pass through the Great Lakes supplying little ascent, and there will
be little moisture associated with this front with less than 10% of
the LREF members producing any precipitation between Wednesday and
next Monday over the CWA. Temperatures will not be as cold as last
week and highs will continue to be mainly in the 30s and 40s with
lows in the teens and 20s. The confidence in the temperature
forecast does lessen over the weekend as NBM 25th/75th percentile at
St. Louis widens from 7 degrees on Friday to 15 degrees on Saturday
and Sunday behind the cold front.
Britt
&&
.AVIATION... (For the 06z TAFs through 06z Monday Night)
Issued at 1100 PM CST Sun Feb 1 2026
A large stratus field that extends north into the Upper Midwest
continues to push southward into the region. The leading southern
edge, which has impacted the central Missouri and St. Louis metro
terminals for the past few hours, largely consists of VFR ceilings
around 4-5kft. Further north into the stratus over far northern
Missouri and southern Iowa, including KUIN, ceilings are mostly MVFR
ranging from 2-3kft. Model guidance continues to struggle with the
southern progression of this stratus field and any MVFR ceilings,
resulting in low confidence regarding the southern extent of these
impactful ceilings. There is a low chance of MVFR ceilings impacting
the St. Louis metro terminals. Our current expectation is conditions
generally won`t improve until sunrise tomorrow when solar insolation
can start to elevate ceilings or help erode any lingering stratus.
Surface winds remain very light for the entire TAF with
southwesterly winds briefly veering to the northwest overnight
before going light and variable tomorrow afternoon with light
easterly winds returning by tomorrow night.
Peine/Elmore
&&
.LSX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
MO...None.
IL...None.
&&
$$
WFO LSX
NWS LSX Office Area Forecast Discussion