Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Pittsburgh, PA
Issued by NWS Pittsburgh, PA
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937 FXUS61 KPBZ 071821 AFDPBZ Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Pittsburgh PA 121 PM EST Sun Dec 7 2025 .SYNOPSIS... Light snow accumulation expected on Sunday primarily north and east of Pittsburgh. Continued rounds of rain and snow chances will prevail through next week with increasing wind Tuesday and Wednesday. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/... KEY MESSAGES: - Light snow today with up to an inch along and north of I-80, little to no accumulation elsewhere - Cold overnight lows in the teens --------------------------------------------------------------- A flat mid-level shortwave will traverse the Great Lakes region this afternoon as a surface cold front slowly sags through the area NW to SE. Both features will bring with them the chance for light snow showers today, highest north of Pittsburgh. Fairly uniform WSW flow through the column hasn`t done much for deep layer moisture return and saturation with latest rounds of ACARS soundings from PIT depicting a dry layer from 850 to 600 mb and a sharp inversion situated at the bottom of that layer. This will limit the overall snowfall totals and rates today, as will weak forcing associated with the zonal shortwave and unfavorable exit region dynamics from a mid-level jet. Latest model runs have continued the downward trend in snow totals which makes sense given the environment. Across the lowlands south of I-80, some light snow showers (perhaps a mix with rain given marginally cold temperature profiles) are possible as potential seeder-feeder effects can saturate the dry layer enough, but with little to no accumulation. Along and north of I-80 is where the "higher" snowfall amounts will be as moisture is a bit better and closer proximity to the shortwave and front overlap aids in forcing. 12z HREF probability for measurable snow is 70-90% along and north of 80 as well as in the PA ridges, but sharply drops off to <20% farther south and in the lowlands. Bumping up to a half an inch shows <10% for our entire area, even after increasing the neighborhood radius to account for spatial uncertainty. So, most will see perhaps a dusting while the higher elevations and I-80 corridor could see up to a half an inch at most. Surface high pressure quickly builds in the wake of the frontal passage and ushers in a colder airmass from Canada. Dew points tank into the low teens/single digits overnight thus lowering the potential floor for radiational cooling, but it appears that enough of a northerly flow and slow to clear cloud cover is going to offset it. Still, lows will dip into the teens for most and single digits north of I-80. && .SHORT TERM /MONDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/... KEY MESSAGES: - Dry and cold Monday under high pressure - Another light snow north of Pittsburgh Tuesday ---------------------------------------------------------------- Surface high pressure will cross the region Monday, which will yield light winds, but also well below normal temperatures as the cP airmass transitions over the forecast area. Although daytime max temperatures will be 15-20 degrees below normal on average across the region,m for perspective, they will still be 10 to 15 degrees warmer than current low max records. Expect highs between 20 to upper 20s. A shortwave within the relatively zonal flow crosses the Great Lakes on Tuesday, returning a slight chance of snow north of PGH during the day associated with a weak surface low. Thermal profiles look to support a melting snowfall as modest WAA supports daytime highs in the mid 30s across much of the region. Accumulations on roadways look unlikely from this system. && .LONG TERM /TUESDAY NIGHT THROUGH SATURDAY/... KEY MESSAGES: - Below normal temperatures continue through the long term. - Additional rounds of potential winter weather with a series of passing disturbances mid and late week. ------------------------------------------------------------------- Upper troughing will continue to be the dominant feature the second half of the upcoming week, which will maintain the relatively active pattern. Continued WAA across the region leaves overnight lows near that freezing mark but supports daytime highs climbing into the low 40s on Wednesday. As such the next system looks to be more of a rain/snow mix, with snow most likely across the ridges and north of I-80 and rain favored elsewhere. Accumulations of snow, most likely in the PA/WV ridges and north of I-80, would wind down through the day as temperatures climb and many areas turn over to rain. The cold front sweeps the region late Wednesday turning remaining precipitation back to snow. QPF estimates from this system remain near 0.25 inches. POPs lower slightly across the lowlands on Thursday favoring a brief stint of lake enhancement and upslope flow on the heels of the Wednesday system. Once again, timing uncertainties in the departure of the midweek system and the arrival of the late week system are spreading POPs widely across Thursday, but some stay of dry weather is expected during this time frame. Yet another clipper looks to sweep the Upper Midwest and Ohio Valley during the Thursday night/Friday time frame. The exact track of this system will determine what kind and how much precipitation we can squeeze out. At this time, ensembles are rather spread on their depictions of this track, but a more southern track would give us a better chance of seeing impactful winter weather. A more northern track would favor a rain/snow mix with the best snow in the ridges and north of I-80, similar to Wednesday. Temperatures in the extended period look to fluctuate some but with the trough advancing into the region, generally trend down as we head towards the weekend. Differing depictions of the depth of the trough as it moves overhead lead to a wide spread in temperatures for next weekend but ensembles that favor a deeper trough feature another shot of very cold air. && .AVIATION /18Z SUNDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/... Prevailing MVFR ceilings are ongoing and expected to continue through tonight. Light snow will impact primarily the northern part of our area and with highest confidence at FKL/DUJ. Confidence in any snow (and associated worsening restrictions) drops the farther south you go. With probabilities of any precipitation only ~20% at ZZV and MGW, no snow was noted at those locations for now. Elsewhere, a mix of PROB30s to the south (lower confidence) and TEMPOs to the north (higher confidence) have been maintained to reflect estimated onset/end times and reductions to visibility. Snow tapers overnight as a weak cold front moves through and light west winds shift to more northwesterly or northerly under building high pressure. MVFR ceilings will continue following the frontal passage with indication that a brief period of IFR could be possible within the post-frontal cold advection regime. Have trended ceilings a bit more pessimistic but haven`t locked in prevailing IFR with this update as guidance continues to bounce around and the majority of upstream observations are hanging on to low MVFR conditions. Expect that VFR will gradually work its way back in as drier air intrudes in the latter half of the overnight hours. Wind will hold out of the northeast into the day on Monday with dry conditions. Outlook... The overall weather pattern through the week strongly favors shortwave movement within upper troughing that brings precipitation and restriction potential to the area generally every other day. Precipitation chances remain largely in the form of snow, save for short periods of rain at southern terminals during daytime hours. Wind looks to increase on Tuesday and especially Wednesday with passing low pressure. && .PBZ WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... PA...None. OH...None. WV...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...MLB/AK NEAR TERM...MLB SHORT TERM...88/AK LONG TERM...88/AK AVIATION...MLB