Snow ends, sun returns, let the great melt of 2025 in Houston commence

In brief: Sunshine and slightly warmer temperatures in Houston this afternoon will allow for substantial melting of snow in the area, but very cold temperatures tonight will allow for a refreeze to take place, likely creating very hazardous driving conditions, possibly worse than today. But melting will resume after mid-morning Wednesday, and a top tier Houston snow event will fade into the history books.

Well, you did it Houston! You have witnessed one of the largest snowstorms in our history. We will await official numbers and do a rundown for you on that tomorrow. As of 10 AM, Hobby Airport had recorded 3″ of snow, making it the third largest snow on record there (fourth if you count the unrecorded 1895 storm). Officially at Bush Airport, it would probably be a top 10 storm, but exactly where it falls I’m not sure. Here on the border of Houston and West U, I can state we got 4 inches. Eric down near League City saw about 2 inches.

Snow totals as of 10 AM; a more refined map will be issued later. (NWS Houston)

From the map, you can see that there was clearly a band from about Bellaire through Liberty County to just north of Beaumont and another from Bolivar into Sabine Pass. Those tended to be the champions of the storm. Vidor near Beaumont saw 6 inches, Baytown about 5.5 inches, and El Lago over 4 inches. Lake Charles ended up just shy of 5 inches, the third biggest snow on record there. The Atchafalaya in Louisiana was particularly hard hit with Lafayette’s 8 inches their biggest snow since the great 1895 storm. Rayne, which set the Louisiana state record in the 1895 storm with 24 inches saw 10.5 inches this time. New Orleans only saw 4 inches officially, but it makes it the largest modern snowstorm there on record.

We’ll have a full photo roundup coming soon. In the meantime, get your fix and follow us on our Instagram page.

Alright, so what now?

First, the sun’s out. Enjoy the snow while we have it. The Houston sun angle will go to work on this. Expect to see a good bit of melting today, especially on the roads and solid surfaces. Snow will melt less aggressively on the grass, so you’ll likely still get some time to play tomorrow morning. The big melt starting this afternoon will cause us problems tonight. All that muck on the roads is going to refreeze. And that may occur as early as 7 or 8 PM. It’s possible that road conditions may be worse tonight than they have been today due to ice. So use extreme caution if you have to go out tonight. Especially as temps drop into the 20s area-wide.

It will be quite cold tonight across the area. (Pivotal Weather)

How cold will it get? Admittedly, models have tended to overforecast cold in recent cold snaps. In other words, they’ve gone too cold relative to what we actually saw. This may be different, however. With fresh snow on the ground in much of the area, that gives a “power-up” to cold conditions. Basically, if you have little snowpack left after today, expect lows in the 20s. If you have your ground mostly covered still, expect teens. The lows will vary widely across the area. An extreme cold warning is in effect for the region, underscoring that this won’t be anywhere near normal for us. Implement your maximum cold weather protection plans for pipes, plants, pets, and people tonight.

Temperatures rebound to the 40s tomorrow afternoon, and that should melt most of the rest of the snow except in shaded areas. Thursday morning’s commute may still feature patchy ice, but it will be navigable. Just use caution. Look for our photo roundup a little later today and our regular update in the morning.

Storm getting underway with a potpourri of precipitation types across the Houston area

In brief: Houston’s forecast appears mostly on track, with a definite trend toward the heaviest snow and sleet emerging south and east of Houston by Tuesday morning. Accumulations may be as high as several inches under the most persistent bands, with a general coating to few inches elsewhere. Winds will gust near the coast Tuesday morning as well, and a very cold night still looks on tap tomorrow night.

Happening now

Well, our much advertised winter storm is underway across the Houston area. We’ve seen reports of sleet, graupel, rain, and snow across the region. We seem to be settling down into a tiered setup now with snow and sleet north and west, sleet and graupel in the lighter precipitation, and sleet and rain near the coast.

A radar image from 9 PM with annotated precipitation types shown. The mostly snow vs. mostly sleet line is across the northwest portion of the region. (RadarScope)

That area of snow and some sleet occurring north and west of Houston is going to gradually fill in and drop south and east through the night. As it does so, we’ll pick up some accumulating snow. As it gets closer to the coast and the potential for banding gets underway, that’s when we may see locally heavy snow anywhere from I-10 southward to the coast.

Forecast for the night

So before 3 AM, look for this potpourri of precipitation types. Again, plain rain should be expected in spots near the coast especially. This is not a surprise and was anticipated ahead of time. After 3 AM, there will be a transition to all sleet and snow and eventually just snow. There is a good chance we will wake up to snow falling tomorrow, although how much on the ground is an open question with a few possibilities. Snow should end from northwest to southeast after 9 AM tomorrow.

Why have we been kind of cagey on snow accumulation numbers?

Those that read us closely can tell we’re throwing out various accumulation numbers based on model data and National Weather Service forecasts but we’re not exactly confident. Now, the event is underway so we should be highly confident, right? Not right. The SREF is a short-range ensemble model, meaning it’s run multiple times with varying snapshots at the beginning to produce a more realistic spread in outcomes. Basically, we want to see how bad or not bad it can get. As of the 3 PM run this afternoon, this model showed snow totals ranging from nada to as much as 7 inches at Hobby Airport.

SREF snow forecast plume for Hobby showing a wide variety of potential outcomes for this storm. (NOAA SPC)

Now, Hobby Airport almost certainly won’t get 7 inches of snow. It probably won’t get 0.0 inches either. The average on this particular model is around 2 inches, which is reasonable, but there is such a spread in options here that it doesn’t necessarily inspire much confidence. The trouble with this event is that we’re dealing with a wintry mix at the start, we don’t know where banding will establish, we’re in a place that rarely sees weather like this so it’s far outside of the bounds of the climatology (normal) these models use, and we have the Gulf of Mexico in our backyard. All that to say, this stuff is hard. If you want snow, hope for the best. If you do not want snow, hope for the best. May the odds be ever in our favor.

Sleet versus graupel

Here’s a true story. Back in my on-air broadcast days in Utica, NY, I once was describing a day where we had a bunch of graupel fall in Upstate New York and explained what it was. Immediately after the news, I received a call from an older gentleman who told me he had a dictionary in front of him, couldn’t find the word, and proceeded to lambaste me for making up words. I can assure you that it is a real word. So what is it, and how does it differ from sleet?

An example of graupel tonight. (tx_kristan on Instagram)

We’ve gotten reports of sleet and pictures of basically tiny “balls” of ice across the area. When you look at the pictures, however, they look more like Dippin’ Dots than ice pellets (sleet). That’s a tell-tale sign of graupel. The differences? Sleet is straightforward: A snowflake falls, hits a layer of milder air above freezing, melts, and then refreezes in colder air below that, falling as quite literally an ice pellet. Graupel happens when you get water droplets that are still liquid below 32°, (or what is called “supercooled”). The supercooled water droplets collide with and freeze on a snow crystal, a process called riming (which is a homonym of “rhyming”). They basically fall to the ground as snow pellets. They tend to be whiter (hence Dippin’ Dots-like!), whereas sleet is clearer. Sleet melts in your hand, whereas graupel may fall apart or crumble in your hand.

Frozen precipitation from left to right: Hail, graupel, sleet, snow. (NOAA NSSL)

What many of you may have reported as sleet tonight was actually graupel. This is a weird storm because we have a pretty intense layer of dry air from the surface up to about 5,000 feet and from about 12,000 feet up to 30,000 feet. The region of the atmosphere where snowflakes will grow is up above 15,000 feet, so we’re seeing a bit of chaos ongoing above our heads. As the night goes on, this dry air will erode as the atmosphere cools, leading to more regular snow.

Eric will have the latest for you in the morning. Stay safe, stay off the roads tonight, and we’ll see where we are tomorrow!

A Winter Storm Warning is now in effect for the entire Houston area as we get closer to locking in a snowstorm

In brief: There have been few changes to the overall forecast today, with higher resolution modeling now coming into range on this storm and essentially validating most of what we’ve seen to this point. A legitimate, rare winter storm, with primarily snow and sleet is likely to impact most of the Houston area tomorrow night and Tuesday, causing significant travel disruption through at least Wednesday morning.

What’s new?

A few minor notes this afternoon, none of which are significant changes in thinking from this morning.

First off, the NWS has upgraded us to a Winter Storm Warning and increased their snow total forecasts for the Houston area.

The NWS is now forecasting about 4 inches of snow in Houston and Galveston, with higher amounts likely in spots. (NWS Houston)

They have also increased the “realistic worst case scenario” snow forecast.

The reasonable worst case scenario for snowfall totals from Tuesday’s storm. (NWS Houston)

Why has this happened? Well for one, modeling has continued to lock in colder with this storm, showing a sharp transition overnight Monday into Tuesday morning from plain rain, freezing rain, and a mix of sleet and snow to just sleet and probably mostly snow across the region. Secondly, high resolution weather models that only run about 48 to 60 hours out in time are now in range of the storm, confirming both that precipitation-type outcome and the potential for “banding” that will exacerbate local snowfall totals.

Again, we have to note: The snow will not fall perfectly uniformly across the region. Depending on where this “banding” sets up, that will determine places that are at risk for 6 inches or more of snow. Quite frankly, that could be anywhere in our area; we simply don’t know at this time. Recent model runs have favored the Houston through Liberty County areas, as well as Brazoria County through Beaumont areas, but that could easily change. I’d say we’ll know more tomorrow, but realistically, we may not know it until it starts.

Again, just to underscore: As long as the forecast stays on track, travel is going to be nearly impossible Monday after midnight and all day Tuesday. You will almost certainly be stuck where you are until at least later Wednesday morning. The exception to this may be the far north now (like north of Highway 105), where snow may end up lighter, no ice occurs, and roads may clear off a bit after the snow stops Tuesday afternoon. But even that may be optimistic. More to come on this.

Historical context

Realistically, this is the most significant snow threat to the region since Christmas Eve 2004. The 1895 storm stands alone as the greatest on record in Texas and Louisiana, and this storm will not dethrone that one. However, with that in mind, this has the potential to set a modern official snowfall record in Houston, which currently sits at a mere 3 inches back in February 1960. January 1940 also sits at 3 inches. While a few storms since then, including Christmas Eve 2004 have produced higher amounts in parts of the area, from a record-keeping perspective, we have a chance to make some noise.

Two-day maximum snowfall extremes in Texas by county; Chambers, Jefferson, and Fort Bend Counties in particular have a chance to set new records. (NOAA NCEI)

Could it be a blizzard?

This morning I noted how wind gusts of 40 to 50 mph were possible on Galveston Island Tuesday morning with this storm. That obviously begs the question of whether or not this could end up meeting blizzard criteria. That will be hard. The technical requirements are:

1.) Sustained wind or frequent gusts to 35 mph or higher. (This will be close)
2.) Heavy snowfall or blowing snow that reduces visibility under a quarter mile. (This will be tough)
3.) Three consecutive hours of these conditions. (This will be very tough)

I’m not saying it can’t happen, but given how rigorous these requirements are, I have doubts that we’ll officially get there. But at least now you know what an official blizzard is. That said, we almost certainly will see blizzard-like conditions on the island if those winds come to fruition and a full changeover from sleet to snow occurs.

Whatever the case, we are into some seriously rare winter weather for Houston in what may end up being a generational winter storm. We will have the latest for you in the morning with revised model data at our fingertips.

Could this actually be a legitimate snowstorm for the Houston area? It’s possible.

In brief: A major winter storm continues to look likely for the Houston area Monday night and Tuesday, with the potential for heavy snow and sleet in parts of the region. Minor ice may occur near the coast, along with windy conditions. Travel will become difficult to impossible Tuesday morning and remain that way through at least Wednesday morning across most of the area. A significant, damaging freeze is likely Wednesday morning as well. We do warm up Thursday.

Current cold

If you’ve stepped outside, or like Eric, started running the Chevron Houston Marathon, you know it’s, um, cold.

It is a cold morning across the Houston area. (NOAA)

Speaking of which, let’s check on Eric as of 8:40 am! Good luck to Eric the rest of the way!

Go Eric, go!

Temperatures will recover some today, getting up into the low or mid-40s. Another cold night is expected tonight, with lows in the 20s across most of the area away from the coast. Expect a hard freeze for many outlying areas and some areas in the city too.

Remember the basic preparations you should be taking.

  • PLANTS. Protect tropical vegetation. Please note, with temperatures dropping this low, some vegetation will probably die regardless.
  • PIPES. Protect any exposed outdoor pipes. Pipes in attics and along exterior walls of structures could freeze at these levels.
  • SPRINKLERS. Sprinkler systems should be shut off and properly drained.
  • ANIMALS. Prepare proper shelter and warmth for animals and livestock and make sure water sources are not frozen.

And also remember to check on people that may not have adequate insulation or access to heating.

Monday

Most of tomorrow should be fine. We will see increasing clouds that may hold temperatures back a bit. Highs should be in the upper-30s. Precipitation begins sometime either Monday afternoon or evening. With temperatures comfortably above freezing, whatever falls initially may be a light rain. Resist the urge to call bust.

Sidebar: The air mass over us will be quite dry. This is important. As the rain begins falling on Monday afternoon and evening, it may fall as virga (rain that does not reach the ground). But as it evaporates on the way down, it will cool the entirety of the atmosphere from a few thousand feet up to the ground. This is essentially priming us for snow and sleet. So initially, it may fall as rain, but that will change Monday night.

The best advice we initially can offer: Be where you need to be by early Monday evening and prepare to be stuck there through at least Wednesday morning.

Monday night and Tuesday morning winter storm

As the precip increases in coverage and intensity and temperatures drop, we will see a changeover from rain to a mix of sleet and snow. I have to be honest: Much of the model data seems to be favoring a gradual change from sleet to mostly snow, especially along and north of I-10. South of there, it should still be a mix of sleet and snow, with potentially a little freezing rain near the coast or Matagorda Bay area.

A couple notes about how things will unfold.

  • This storm has been strongly signaling what we call mesoscale banding or the potential for a deformation zone. In plain language? There will be widespread snow and sleet, but embedded within that will be a couple corridors of heavy snow. Those bands can see quick, heavy accumulation and snow rates of 1 to 2 inches per hour, along with the potential for thundersnow.
  • That banding will also lead to a disparity in snow totals. You could, in theory, have an area that sees 2 to 3 inches and literally down the road an area that gets 6 or 7 inches.
  • Sleet is the biggest risk to all this. If we end up with significant sleet and less snow, accumulations will be much lower — but travel will be just as bad. Models are trending toward more snow over sleet for much of the region, but admittedly, this is not an area where models handle things super wonderfully.
  • Wind will howl on Tuesday morning, especially on Galveston Island, where gusts could exceed 40 to 45 mph. Inland gusts will be to 20 to 30 mph. Coupled with areas of heavy snow, this will create extremely poor visibility and potentially some blowing and drifting of snow. Yes, that’s an actual sentence I just typed for Southeast Texas.

When all is said and done, how much snow will you get in your backyard? The official NWS forecast is shown below.

Official NWS snow forecast for the region. (NOAA)

I will say that the risk is probably asymmetrically skewed to the higher side here. In other words, there is a chance of more snow than shown, but again it will depend on sleet and exactly where those “mesoscale bands” setup. Max totals could be, could be as high as 6 to 8 inches. But those will likely be the exception, not the rule.

How about ice? Well, the official NWS forecast is one that isn’t overly bullish on ice, which is good news. Ice is where you can start to have more meaningful issues with infrastructure issues (trees, power lines, etc.). Ice of this amount would make conditions a little extra slippery but be unlikely to cause damage.

Official NWS ice accumulation forecast. (NOAA)

The highest ice totals are likely to be south of I-10 and in the Victoria Crossroads back toward south of San Antonio.

Travel concerns

There’s no real good way to get around this: We are inherently unprepared for a major snowstorm because, well, it rarely ever happens. Thus, you can expect that travel will be difficult to perhaps impossible on Tuesday, probably Wednesday morning, and maybe even Wednesday afternoon. We really cannot underscore this enough: Barring a dramatic forecast change, tou will probably not be able to get very far in a vehicle Tuesday or Wednesday morning. Your flight will probably be cancelled. Prepare to be stuck where you are after Monday evening.

Wednesday morning hard freeze

With ideal conditions for cold weather, including fresh snow on the ground, you can expect Wednesday morning to be very, very cold. While it won’t be super cold across the rest of Texas, locally here in Southeast Texas, we may rival one of our coldest mornings of the last few years.

Wednesday morning’s forecast low temperatures. (Pivotal Weather)

Expect lows in the teens virtually everywhere away from the coast. Areas that see minimal snow accumulation will also likely be milder. This will be a hard, damaging freeze and maximum cold weather precautions need to be taken.

Wednesday afternoon should see sunshine but with snow and a bitter cold start, we will likely only get into the mid-30s or so. Another hard freeze is possible Wednesday night, albeit much less cold than Wednesday morning. And we should bounce back into the 40s on Thursday. Alas, the snow will melt.

Anyway, we’ll update you on any changes later this afternoon. But hopefully this post answers most of your questions in the meantime. Stay warm!