SPC Forecast Products
SPC - No watches are valid as of Sun Mar 29 11:52:01 UTC 2026
Published: Sun, 29 Mar 2026 at 06:51:05 AM CDT
No watches are valid as of Sun Mar 29 11:52:01 UTC 2026.

SPC - No MDs are in effect as of Sun Mar 29 11:52:01 UTC 2026
Published: Sun, 29 Mar 2026 at 06:51:04 AM CDT
No Mesoscale Discussions are in effect as of Sun Mar 29 11:52:01 UTC 2026.

SPC Mar 29, 2026 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook
Published: Sun, 29 Mar 2026 at 03:47:55 AM CDT
Day 4-8 Outlook
Day 4-8 Outlook Image
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook  
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0345 AM CDT Sun Mar 29 2026

Valid 011200Z - 061200Z

...DISCUSSION...
A more seasonal synoptic regime is expected over the CONUS through
the upcoming week as long-wave troughing slowly becomes established
over the western two-thirds of the country. This will favor lee
cyclone development and poleward moisture return ahead of occasional
frontal intrusions. In general, ensemble consensus is that a
leading, low-amplitude upper disturbance will propagate across the
central CONUS during the D4/Wednesday to D5/Thursday period before a
more amplified upper trough migrates into the Plains during the
D6/Friday to D7/Saturday time frame. While there is broad agreement
in this pattern among most guidance, notable discrepancies and
spread among solutions limits confidence in the location, timing, or
magnitude of any severe threat. 

...D4/Wednesday - Southern Plains...
A cold front pushing east/southeast across the central U.S. on
Tuesday is forecast to stall across the southern Plains into the OH
Valley by Wednesday. Aloft, ascent associated with the leading upper
disturbance will overspread TX/OK, leading to modest surface low
development along the stalled frontal boundary. Continued moisture
return coupled with easterly advection of steep mid-level lapse
rates will likely yield a reservoir of buoyancy across portions of
central/eastern TX/OK and into AR/LA. Thunderstorm development along
the frontal zone appears probable by late afternoon, and 40-50 knot
mid-level flow attendant to the wave should provide adequate wind
shear for organized storms. However, guidance continues to show
variability with frontal placement and is likely displaying a
northward bias given the tendency for long-range guidance to
underestimate low-level cold advection. Additionally, it is unclear
whether storm motions and deep-layer shear vectors will be favorably
oriented to the front to support discrete convection and a more
robust severe threat.

...D6/Friday and D7/Saturday - Southern Plains to the Ohio Valley...
More intense surface low development is anticipated across the
southern Plains and Great Lakes region Friday into Saturday as an
more amplified upper wave begins to migrate east. Northward moisture
return will likely continue through Friday with thunderstorm
development possible in vicinity to the deepening lee cyclone.
Although model variability remains fairly high at this range,
ensemble guidance does show a modest QPF signal across OK/KS where
the probability for adequate SBCAPE and deep-layer shear for
organized convection is reasonably high.

On Saturday, the ejection of the upper wave into the Plains will 
result in the northeastward acceleration of the lee cyclone. Rapid
moisture return within a strengthening low-level wind field is
possible as the low reaches the Great Lakes region by late Saturday.
Based on forecast soundings and ensemble QPF signals, some severe
thunderstorm potential is noted along and ahead of a cold front
attendant to the low. However, high variability among guidance over
the past 24 hours and the potential for a sub-optimal displacement
of the primary upper jet with the expanding warm sector casts
considerable uncertainty on the overall severe threat.

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SPC Mar 29, 2026 0730 UTC Day 3 Severe Thunderstorm Outlook
Published: Sun, 29 Mar 2026 at 02:25:30 AM CDT
SPC 0730Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Outlook Image
Day 3 Convective Outlook  
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0224 AM CDT Sun Mar 29 2026

Valid 311200Z - 011200Z

...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE GREAT
LAKES REGION...

...SUMMARY...
Isolated to widely scattered strong/severe thunderstorms are
expected through the day and into the early evening hours Tuesday
across the Great Lakes region.

...Synopsis...
A surface low is forecast to deepen across the central/northern
Plains through the day Monday ahead of a low-amplitude upper wave.
By early Tuesday, this low will begin accelerating eastward,
reaching southern Quebec by 12 UTC Wednesday. A cold front trailing
the surface cyclone will push south into the Plains and eastward
across the Great Lakes/OH Valley. Thunderstorm potential will be
most pronounced along and ahead of the front, though more isolated
thunderstorms will be possible along a dryline across portions of
TX, across portions of the Southeast, and over the northern Great
Basin.

...Great Lakes...
Residual thunderstorms from Monday night may be ongoing by 12 UTC
across the Great Lakes region along and north of the surface warm
front. Most guidance suggests that northward moisture advection will
occur ahead of the approaching cold front as the surface low lifts
east/northeast with MLCAPE values between 1000-1500 J/kg likely by
21-00 UTC. Additional thunderstorm development is expected along the
front by early afternoon, and 35-45 knot effective bulk shear should
promote organized convection - most likely in the form of organized
clusters and/or linear segments. Large hail and severe winds will
most likely be the predominant hazards given the expectation for
clustered/linear storm modes, though some tornado threat may emerge
across the lower Great Lakes region where low-level SRH will be
regionally greatest on the northeastern fringe of the returning
moisture.  

...Southern Plains...
A weak surface trough/dryline will likely emerge across the TX
Panhandle/western OK southward into west-central TX by late
afternoon as a weak lee low deepens over the southern High Plains.
Richer low-level moisture will likely be displaced to the east away
from the boundary, and warm temperatures at the base of an EML will
most likely preclude thunderstorm development until the arrival of
the cold front Tuesday evening. However, a few deterministic
solutions hint that diurnal heating may be strong enough to support
isolated convection along the dryline by late afternoon. Wind
profiles across this region hint that organized thunderstorms are
possible and could pose a severe threat. While this potential is
noted, ensemble support for this scenario is low, and any convection
that does develop will most likely struggle to be maintained owing
to weak forcing for ascent and fairly dry low/mid-level conditions.

..Moore.. 03/29/2026

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SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Published: Sun, 29 Mar 2026 at 02:10:17 AM CDT
SPC Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook Image
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook  
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0208 AM CDT Sun Mar 29 2026

Valid 301200Z - 311200Z

...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR PORTIONS OF CENTRAL AND EASTERN
WYOMING...

...Synopsis...
An upper ridge will persist across the CONUS tomorrow (Monday). An
embedded impulse will traverse the northern Rockies, supporting the
development and eastward progression of a surface low over the
northern Plains. The combination of gradient and dry downslope flow
across the central Rockies into the High Plains will yield Elevated
conditions by Monday afternoon. At least 15 mph sustained westerly
surface winds will coincide with 15-20 percent RH for several hours.
Wind will be regionally stronger across much of Wyoming (i.e. 25 mph
in several locales), suggesting the need for Critical highlights.
Isolated dry thunderstorms will also be possible across portions of
central Arizona into far western New Mexico, where the approach of a
mid-level impulse will support high-based thunderstorm development
atop a mixed boundary layer and dry fuels.

..Squitieri.. 03/29/2026

...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...

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