SPC Forecast Products
SPC Apr 16, 2026 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook
Published: Thu, 16 Apr 2026 at 11:27:01 AM CDT
SPC 1630Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Outlook Image
Day 1 Convective Outlook  
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1124 AM CDT Thu Apr 16 2026

Valid 161630Z - 171200Z

...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR NEW YORK INTO
SOUTHERN VERMONT AS WELL AS FOR NORTHERN ARKANSAS...SOUTHERN
MISSOURI AND FAR WESTERN TENNESSEE...

...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible this afternoon over New
York into southern Vermont with damaging gusts and perhaps a tornado
or two the primary threats.  Large to very large hail is possible
with stronger storms over the northern half of Arkansas.

...Ozark Plateau into the Mid-South...
Recent visible satellite imagery shows some ACCAS across
south-central MO, indicative of low/mid-level warm advection amid
the steep lapse rate environment in place. These steep lapse rates
are forecast to continue spread eastward, while low-level moisture
advection brings low 60s dewpoints northeastward into the region as
well. This will result in a moderate to strongly buoyant airmass
(i.e. MLCAPE from 1500 to 2000 J/kg) by the early afternoon.
Additionally, moderate mid to high level flow will remain in place,
resulting in long hodographs and overall environmental conditions
that are very favorable for supercells capable of large to very
large hail. Latest guidance continues the earlier trends of
developing storms in this area, which match observational
expectations as well. Large to very large hail  (1 to 3 inches in
diameter) is possible with any updrafts that mature into supercells.
Low-level flow is weak, keeping tornado probability low but none
zero. Given the modest pocket of mid-level dry air present,
supercells will likely become outflow dominant with time, 
supporting the potential for damaging gusts across the region
(particular eastern areas) as well.

...NY/VT/NH southeastward into the central Appalachians...
Recent surface analysis places a low over the eastern
Ontario/southern Quebec border vicinity, with modest surface
troughing extending southeastward from this low across central Lower
MI. Airmass across much of NY is characterized by dewpoints in the
low 60s. Dewpoints should stay in the low 60s throughout the day
despite modest mixing amid diurnal heating. This should result in
airmass destabilization ahead of the modest surface trough, with a
general increase in large-scale ascent beginning during the
afternoon as well. Little to no convective inhibition is
anticipated, supporting the potential for more cellular development
over the warm sector initially, before a more expansive convective
line develops along the eastward-progressing surface trough. Ample
mid to high-level flow will favor storm organization, including a
risk for large hail and a tornado with the more intense discrete
cells. The wind risk will tend to focus with linear structures that
evolve over time.  An isolated threat for wind damage and  perhaps
hail will extend southward into PA/WV and the Cumberland Plateau,
where a few stronger storms may yield those hazards.

...Edwards Plateau into the TX Big Country and western north TX...
A strongly buoyant and weakly capped airmass is expected to develop
along the dryline extending southwestward from western OK through
the Edwards Plateau. Although neutral to weak shortwave ridging is
expected throughout much of the morning into the late afternoon,
some limited ascent (associated with a weak shortwave trough moving
out of northern Mexico) may begin to spread across the dryline by
early evening. This combined with dryline circulations may be enough
to initiate isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms. Low-level
flow will be weak, but moderate to strong westerly flow aloft will
result in wind profiles very favorable for supercells capable of
large to very large hail. Any storms that develop should weaken
quickly with the onset of nocturnal cooling.

..Mosier/Squitieri.. 04/16/2026

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SPC - No watches are valid as of Thu Apr 16 16:27:02 UTC 2026
Published: Thu, 16 Apr 2026 at 11:26:05 AM CDT
No watches are valid as of Thu Apr 16 16:27:02 UTC 2026.

SPC MD 462
Published: Thu, 16 Apr 2026 at 11:26:02 AM CDT
MD 0462 CONCERNING SEVERE POTENTIAL...WATCH LIKELY FOR SOUTHERN MISSOURI...NORTHERN ARKANSAS...PORTIONS OF WESTERN TENNESSEE/KENTUCKY
MD 0462 Image

Mesoscale Discussion 0462
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1111 AM CDT Thu Apr 16 2026

Areas affected...southern Missouri...northern Arkansas...portions of
western Tennessee/Kentucky

Concerning...Severe potential...Watch likely 

Valid 161611Z - 161745Z

Probability of Watch Issuance...80 percent

SUMMARY...Severe risk to increase through the early afternoon.
Primary risks will include large hail and damaging wind.

DISCUSSION...Visible satellite across southern Missouri shows an
area of deepening cu development, with a few smaller cells with
occasional lightning developing east of Springfield. The 12z RAOB
from SGF (Springfield, MO) shows MLCIN in place, which can still be
observed in surface objective analysis. With additional
heating/mixing and cooling aloft with the approaching shortwave,
this is expected to erode over the next couple of hours. 

HREF guidance suggests that a cluster of thunderstorms may develop
by early afternoon before moving south and eastward into northern
Arkansas as forcing for ascent increases. Forecast soundings depict
linearly elongated hodographs and steep low to mid-level hodographs,
favorable for supercells capable of large hail. Through time, it is
likely that storms will cluster with an increase in damaging wind
potential. Additional thunderstorms will be possible near the OK/AR
border this afternoon. A watch will likely be needed to cover these
threats.

..Thornton/Mosier.. 04/16/2026

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

ATTN...WFO...PAH...MEG...LSX...LZK...SGF...TSA...

LAT...LON   35679001 35269132 34989266 35009340 35079404 35239437
            35589446 36039459 36599456 37359301 37349293 37459249
            37499175 37499137 37139014 36728949 36018957 35679001 

MOST PROBABLE PEAK TORNADO INTENSITY...UP TO 95 MPH
MOST PROBABLE PEAK WIND GUST...55-70 MPH
MOST PROBABLE PEAK HAIL SIZE...1.50-2.50 IN

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SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Published: Thu, 16 Apr 2026 at 11:06:25 AM CDT
SPC Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook Image
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook  
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1104 AM CDT Thu Apr 16 2026

Valid 161700Z - 171200Z

...CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AREA FOR PORTIONS OF THE CENTRAL AND
SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS...

...Central and northern High Plains...
A surface low will deepen in the northern and central Plains ahead
of an approaching upper-level trough currently traversing the
Northern Rockies. Increasing southwesterly flow aloft and
consolidating surface pressure gradient will aid in developing gusty
south to southwest winds accompanied by a dry, well-mixed boundary
later across much of the central and northern Plains this afternoon.
A corridor of stronger southerly winds is expected across portions
of eastern SD and southwestern MN although RH reductions should be
limited to the 20-25% range this afternoon. Nonetheless, receptive
fuels coupled with the increasing southerly winds in place could
support wildfire spread, necessitating a northeastward extension of
Elevated Highlights into this region.

...Southern Plains...
Lee surface troughing extends southward from the evolving surface
low in the Northern Plains into the central and southern High
Plains. A considerably drier boundary layer and supportive downslope
trajectories will allow for Critical fire weather conditions across
portions of eastern CO, northeastern NM and OK/TX Panhandles. Poor
relative humidity recoveries were observed across portions of the
southern High Plains, with current RH at 10% or below across
southeastern NM and northwest TX. Southwest winds of 15-25 mph amid
the presence of a 90F+ low-level thermal ridge and RH dropping into
the single digits during peak heating this afternoon, will support
critical fire weather conditions. Critical and corresponding
Elevated Highlights were nudged southward into portions of Northwest
TX to account for current surface observation trends and near term
model guidance.

The forecast remains on track for an elevated fire weather threat
across portions of the Central Appalachians and Mid Atlantic with no
changes to current highlights. Please see previous discussion for
additional details.

..Williams.. 04/16/2026

.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 0204 AM CDT Thu Apr 16 2026/

...Synopsis...
An upper-level trough will deepen as it moves into the southern
Great Basin/Four Corners today and tonight. As the trough
intensifies, an initially modest subtropical jet will strengthen
across northern Mexico into the southern Plains. At the surface, a
strong low pressure system will deepen across SD as an associated
cold front moves southward into the central Plains. Another
shortwave trough will move over the eastern US bolstering low-level
winds across parts of the Appalachians and Mid Atlantic.

...Central and Southern High Plains...
As upper forcing from the approaching trough spreads over the
Rockies into the plains, the surface low will deepen and move
southeastward with the cold front. This should encourage a broad
area of strong west/southwesterly downslope winds from eastern WY
and SD, into parts of the central Plains. Sustained southwesterly
winds of 15-25 mph (gusts up to 30 mph) amid 10-15 percent RH are
expected atop very dry and receptive fuels, supporting critical fire
weather concerns. Fire-weather conditions will gradually end
overnight from north to south as the front moves south with the
surface low.

Farther south across OK/TX and NM, a surface pressure trough will
encourage gusty westerly low-level flow. Sustained winds of 15-25
mph are likely as the surface low gradually moves southward ahead of
the cold front. Low RH is also expected (10-15%) owing to downslope
trajectories and warm afternoon temperatures. While some areas have
seen rainfall in the past few days, several days of poor humidity
recoveries and gusty winds have allowed for significant drying and a
broad area of critical fuels.

...Central Appalachians and Mid Atlantic...
Strengthening southwesterly flow at the base of the shortwave tough
will encourage strengthening of a lee trough. This will aid gusty
downslope winds of 10-15 mph through the afternoon. Afternoon RH
values will drop to 25-30%. With little recent rainfall and very dry
fuels, several hours of elevated fire-weather conditions appear
likely. More localized fire-weather conditions could extend into
southern and central PA. However, here increased RH and weaker winds
amid areas of recent rainfall should limit broader concerns.

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

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SPC Apr 16, 2026 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook
Published: Thu, 16 Apr 2026 at 07:37:03 AM CDT
SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Outlook Image
Day 1 Convective Outlook  
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0734 AM CDT Thu Apr 16 2026

Valid 161300Z - 171200Z

...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR NEW YORK INTO
SOUTHERN VERMONT AND OVER THE NORTHERN HALF OF ARKANSAS...

...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible this afternoon over New
York into southern Vermont with damaging gusts and perhaps a tornado
or two the primary threats.  Large to very large hail is possible
with stronger storms over the northern half of Arkansas.

...Northeast southward into the central Appalachians and Cumberland
Plateau...
Water-vapor imagery this morning shows an upper trough over the
mid/upper MS Valley moving east towards the Northeast.  A belt of
strong west-southwesterly 500-mb flow (50-65 kt) will overspread
much of the Northeast today in conjunction with the
eastward-migrating shortwave trough.  Visible-satellite imagery
shows scattered to broken cloud cover to the south of a west-east
oriented frontal zone extending east from a surface low analyzed
over Lake Huron.  Heating of an adequately moist boundary layer
(surface dewpoints in the 56-62 deg F range) will result in weak to
locally moderate buoyancy by midday into the mid afternoon (500-1250
J/kg MLCAPE).  Large-scale ascent associated with the approaching
disturbance and convergence in the vicinity of the frontal zone will
lead to scattered storm development this afternoon.  Ample mid to
high-level flow will favor storm organization, including the
possibility for a few supercells and an organized band of storms.  A
risk for large hail and a tornado could accompany the more intense
cells, whereas the wind risk will tend to focus with linear
structures that evolve.  An isolated threat for wind damage and
perhaps hail will extend southward into PA/WV and the Cumberland
Plateau, where a few stronger storms may yield those hazards.

...Mid South...
Satellite imagery shows the trailing portion of the upper shortwave
trough over the western Great Lakes is moving east across OK this
morning.  This upper feature and associated mid-level cold pocket
(-16 to -18 deg C at 500 mb) will move across the MO Ozarks and AR
this afternoon.  A reservoir of lower 60s deg F surface dewpoints
and strong heating in wake of early day showers and isolated
thunderstorms will favor robust CAPE profiles and elongated mid to
upper portions of the hodograph.  Latest guidance shows several
cells developing within a weakly capped airmass by mid afternoon. 
The stronger storms will likely become supercells yielding a risk
for large to very large hail (1 to 3 inches in diameter).  Modest
low-level flow will tend to limit low-level mesocyclone intensity
and the lessen the overall tornado risk.  A couple of smaller
clusters may evolve during the early evening with an isolated wind
threat potentially ensuing before this activity weakens by mid
evening.  

...Edwards Plateau into the TX Big Country and western north TX...
Moderate to strong potential instability is forecast to develop
beneath steep lapse rates, along and east of a dryline.  Although
neutral to weak shortwave ridging is expected today, some of the
latest model guidance shows isolated to widely scattered storm
development by late afternoon on the northwestern rim of richer
low-level moisture arcing from the Edwards Plateau into western
north TX.  Strong heating will likely erode appreciable remaining
convective inhibition by 20-22 UTC.  Strong west-southwesterly
100-kt 200-mb flow will elongate hodographs amidst a moderately
buoyant airmass.  Widely spaced/isolated supercells will mainly
yield a large hail threat late this afternoon into the early
evening.

..Smith/Dean.. 04/16/2026

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