Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Anchorage, AK
Issued by NWS Anchorage, AK
811 FXAK68 PAFC 170148 AFDAFC Southcentral and Southwest Alaska Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Anchorage AK 448 PM AKST Sun Nov 16 2025 .SHORT TERM FORECAST SOUTHCENTRAL ALASKA (Days 1 through 3: Tonight through Wednesday)... A significant pattern change is underway across Southcentral this afternoon as the prolonged period of below average temperatures, high pressure and clear skies comes to an end, while a much warmer, unsettled and wet/snowy pattern takes shape. A front extending from a strong low moving off the coast of the Kuskokwim Delta is now moving up from the western Gulf and Kodiak into the Kenai Peninsula and Cook Inlet region. Radar returns are already showing a band of light to moderate snow moving up from Homer into Kenai and Soldotna, and this band should move up into Anchorage and parts of the Mat-Su over the next few hours. Farther east, an upper ridge is shifting off towards the AlCan border from the Copper Basin, where upper level cloud cover is already increasing ahead of the incoming system to the southwest. Temperatures in general are beginning as steady warming trend across most of the outlook area, though some spots such as Willow and Gulkana are still holding on to temperatures hovering near zero. By later tonight, strong southeasterly and cross-barrier flow developing along and ahead of the front will shut snow back off temporarily in the lee of the mountains from parts of the northern Kenai Peninsula out to Anchorage. Meanwhile, steady snow will overspread much of the greater Prince William Sound and eastern Kenai Peninsula, particularly close to and over the coastal mountains. On Monday morning, a negatively tilted trough lifting up from the northern Gulf will amplify as it approaches the Kenai Peninsula and help induce the development of a triple point low along the front near or just to the south of Prince William Sound. This setup looks favorable for a rather short duration but very intense band of snow to set up from near the developing low and along the approaching trough axis to the northwest, including much of the Kenai Peninsula, Mat-Su and Anchorage. A quick 2 to 5 inches of accumulation is likely for Anchorage and the Mat-Su as the band moves across from southwest to northeast. Looking a bit farther to the east, much higher totals will be possible across parts of the interior Kenai Peninsula and near Portage and Whittier, largely depending on how much warm air is able to filter into lower elevations with the easterly flow moving in north of the front and weak low. However, guidance has seemingly been playing catch up with the amount of cold air in place ahead of this system, and we accordingly have trended the forecast towards more locations across the Kenai Peninsula holding on to all snow through Monday evening. This is also in line with the thinking that the progression of the low as it tracks into Prince William Sound will substantially shorten the window for easterly flow to advect warmer air into the Kenai Peninsula, with winds rapidly weakening as the low enters the Sound late Monday morning. Winter Weather Advisories will go into effect later this evening for Portage, Whittier and much of the Seward Highway corridor from Girdwood south to Moose Pass. Of note, some of the heaviest snowfall rates of up to 2 inches per hour could impact the morning commute along the Seward Highway on Monday morning. From Monday night into Tuesday, model agreement breaks down quickly. The track and timing of a secondary shortwave trough moving up into the Gulf remains highly in question, with some solutions showing the shortwave head northeast towards Yakutat. Some other solutions pull the trough straight north into the Southcentral, possibly bringing another round of snow and coastal rain to parts of the region Tuesday into Tuesday night. Regardless of the exact details, an unsettled and showery pattern will continue through midweek. -AS && .SHORT TERM FORECAST SOUTHWEST ALASKA/BERING SEA/ALEUTIANS (Days 1 to 3)... A ~960 mb surface low continues to lift northward across the eastern Bering this afternoon. Models have struggled with resolving the exact track of the low, at times taking west and east of Nunivak Island. The latest consensus is coming into better agreement with having the center of the low clip the western side of Nunivak Island later tonight, while the low gradually begins to weaken. Before weakening occurs, however, numerous impacts will continue to be felt across the Kuskokwim Delta region. Winds have been gusting to near 50 mph across Nunivak Island and Nelson Island the past few hours with visibility dropping down to 1/4 mile or less. Thus, the previous winter weather advisory for blowing snow has been upgraded to a blizzard warning for the Kuskokwim Delta through early Monday morning. Conditions elsewhere along the Kuskokwim Delta Coast will continue to be at risk of snow and blowing snow with visibility dropping down to 1/2 mile or less at times. Gusty conditions and snow are also persisting across interior portions of the Kuskokwim Delta with Nunapitchuk, in particular, experiencing blizzard-like conditions in the short term. A winter weather advisory has been expanded across zone 756 as snow and blowing snow have clearly spread further inland. This advisory will also extend through early Monday morning before the low itself lifts further north and out of the region. Elsewhere across Southwest Alaska, scattered snow showers are ongoing across Bristol Bay and locations from Togiak to Dillingham are forecast to receive on the order of 2 to 3 inches of snow through tonight. Warming temperatures on Monday, owing to persistent southerly flow into the region, will transition any remaining snow to rain through tomorrow morning. With little break in the weather, the next Bering Sea storm system arrives Tuesday into Wednesday. A broad front will push into the Aleutians on Tuesday with gusty winds and showery conditions. By Wednesday, an occluded front is progged to reach the Kuskokwim Delta Coast with another round of potentially strong southerly winds. -BL && .LONG TERM FORECAST (Days 4 through 7: Thursday through Sunday)... Broad upper level troughing will be present over the Bering Sea by the start of the long term forecast period. Shortwaves rotating around the base of the trough will allow for a strong surface low to lift up toward Kodiak Island on Thursday shifting the main trough axis east over mainland Alaska for Friday and Saturday. Deterministic models vary greatly on the exact track of this surface low, but it looks to direct a plume of deep moisture toward the southern Alaska coast Thursday and Friday. Expect moderate to heavy rain at sea level and heavy mountain snow for the Alaska Peninsula, Kodiak Island, and the north Gulf Coast. Gale to storm-force winds will also be associated with this low in the surrounding marine areas before it dissipates Friday night. High pressure will build over the Aleutians through the weekend and increase in amplitude as it marches over western mainland Alaska by Monday. It will quickly be followed by upper level troughing over the western Bering with deep southerly flow and embedded surface lows locally enhancing winds and rain across the western Aleutians. && .AVIATION... PANC...A quick bout of snow is likely later this evening with a period of MVFR CIGs/VIS possible. Conditions improve a bit before deteriorating once again as snow becomes likely by Monday morning. CIGs/VIS could drop into IFR late Monday morning into early afternoon in heavier snow. && $$