Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Denver/Boulder, CO
Issued by NWS Denver/Boulder, CO
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174 FXUS65 KBOU 182026 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 126 PM MST Tue Nov 18 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Quiet weather continues through Wednesday. - Still a considerable amount of uncertainty regarding the storm system for Thursday and Friday. Accumulating snow remains likely (60- 70%) across the Front Range mountains and foothills, and across the Palmer Divide. Only a slight chance (<20%) of snow for the Denver metro and plains. - Dry and mild (slightly above normal temperatures) conditions return for the weekend. && .DISCUSSION /Through Tuesday/... Issued at 126 PM MST Tue Nov 18 2025 Upper level ridging will prevail over Colorado through Wednesday ahead of an upper level low over Southern California and Desert Southwest. This will continue to bring mild and dry conditions across the area with highs in the 60s across northeast Colorado. Flow aloft turns southerly as the upper level low tracks eastward. This will increase moisture and cloud cover Thursday with temperature cooling closer to normal. Depending on the track of this system rain and snow showers may lift northward into the area during the afternoon. The main upper level low over the southwest part of the country is ejected northeastward across the Desert Southwest and ends up somewhere over eastern Colorado and/or Kansas. As it tracks eastward, the system will be weakening. However, there is a good amount of moisture with this system as precipitable water values climb 200-300 percent of normal. The storm track still is uncertain leading to a highly uncertain forecast across the area. The latest trends seem to favor the eastern plains and the Palmer Divide. For the mountains, with weak flow aloft (no orographic lift) and the best synoptic lift well south and east, snowfall amounts should be light. The most uncertain area is the northern foothills and urban corridor where models vary from zero precipitation to over an inch. Cold air stays bottled up well north of us with 700mb temperatures - 1C to -4C over Colorado, so most of the precipitation below 6000- 7000 feet is expected to fall as rain. Only hope for snowfall across the lower elevation is if the precipitation rate is intense enough to cool the air column enough for snow. The coldest model, the NAM, shows isolated locations of this occurring. Rain/snow comes to an end during the day Friday as this weakening system shifts east of the region. Mild and dry conditions are expected to return for the weekend and early next week. The region will be between systems, the exiting one from Thursday/Friday, and an upper level low over the southwest part of the country. Models generally agree the next system tracks well south of the area, across northern Mexico, Arizona, and New Mexico. Only a small subset (~5-10%) of the ensembles show this system tracking far enough north to bring rain/snow to the northern half of Colorado, thus will keep the forecast dry for the weekend and Monday. On Tuesday, we see a shift in the weather pattern with ridging along the west coast and northwest flow across Colorado. Too soon to pick out embedded shortwaves in the flow aloft, but cooler temperatures seem to be a good bet. Will also have a chance for snow in the mountains with this type of setup being more favorable for snow. && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS through 18Z Wednesday/... Issued at 1034 AM MST Tue Nov 18 2025 Forecast remains on track. VFR conditions will prevail for all terminals through the TAF period. Drainage flow will back to a more southeasterly direction shortly (next 1-2 hrs) before a return to typical drainage pattern this evening. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ DISCUSSION...12 AVIATION...BRQ