


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Salt Lake City, UT
Issued by NWS Salt Lake City, UT
669 FXUS65 KSLC 141018 AFDSLC Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Salt Lake City UT 418 AM MDT Tue Oct 14 2025 .SYNOPSIS...Increased moisture associated with a system set to move through tonight and tomorrow will result in unsettled weather. Colder temperatures will set in as the system departs, though drier conditions and a gradual warmup are expected for the weekend. && .DISCUSSION... Key Points: - A moist Pacific system will move through the region through midweek, bringing widespread rain along with some high elevation snow. Localized flash flooding will be possible in rain sensitive areas with thunderstorms on the warmer side of the system. - Increasing winds ahead of a deepening Pacific system will peak this afternoon. Widespread wind gusts in the 30 to 50 mph range are expected, especially across portions of southern and western Utah. - Colder temperatures will return following the passage of a cold front Tuesday night into the day Wednesday. Potential is noted for locally freezing temperatures in some locations Thursday and/or Friday morning. Morning satellite water vapor imagery shows a closed low centered just off the central Cal coast with Utah under a southwesterly flow aloft. Latest analysis shows PWATs between 0.6-0.7 inches across northern and eastern Utah, and between 0.4-0.5 inches across southwest Utah. These values are 125-200% of normal for this time of year. A weak disturbance with an associated jet streak that lifted southwest through northeast across Utah produced showers and thunderstorms across mainly western and northern Utah overnight. These showers continue across northeast Utah early this morning. A few showers may linger across mainly northern Utah into the afternoon, otherwise the airmass will be a bit more stable across a good portion of the area. Southerly winds will continue to increase today ahead of the approaching storm system, strongest across the western valleys. Due to these winds, good mixing will aid in maintaining temperatures near to just slightly below normal. The upper low will approach Utah this evening. As it does so, increased upper diffluence along with a surface cold front will produce an area of fairly widespread precipitation which will begin to move into western Utah by late this afternoon. This area of precipitation will then gradually lift northeast into tomorrow, focusing mostly across northern Utah for Wednesday and into Thursday. Locally moderate rainfall within this wider area of precipitation could lead to isolated flash flooding in some of the more prone areas, especially this evening. The heaviest precipitation is expected across western and northern Utah. The latest NBM has a 40-60% chance of greater than 1 inch of precipitation between tonight and Thursday along the northern and central Wasatch Front and Wasatch Mountains, and a 35-45% chance across southwest Utah. Cooler temperatures will settle into the area behind the cold front. Besides bringing max temperatures down to 10-15 degrees below normal for Wednesday and Thursday, lowering snow levels will lead to mountain snow in areas above 6500-7500 feet. The upper Cottonwoods and high Uintas have a 50-60% chance of seeing greater than 4 inches of snow. For other mountain areas, the probability is less than 40%. High pressure will build into the area for the end of the week and into the weekend. This will result a warming and drying trend across the area. However, the large-scale pattern remains fairly progressive, with the next storm system potentially impacting the area near the beginning of next week. && .AVIATION...KSLC...Showers and thunderstorms reducing CIGS/VIS into the MVFR range will end by 11Z, with VFR conditions following throughout the day. Winds may be light and variable through 13Z before southerly winds become re-established and continue throughout the day. After 02Z the chance for showers and isolated thunderstorms will increase again, and continue through the overnight hours with periods of MVFR CIGS/VIS possible. .REST OF UTAH AND SOUTHWEST WYOMING...Lingering showers and thunderstorms reducing CIGS/VIS into the MVFR range across northern Utah/southwest Wyoming will end by 15Z, leaving VFR conditions under southerly flow across the region through the daytime hours. These winds will gust in excess of 30 KTS across southwest Utah this afternoon. After 00Z this evening moisture will spread back into the region bringing widespread showers and scattered thunderstorms across the state through the overnight hours. Periods of MVFR and local IFR conditions can be expected, particularly across northern Utah/southwest Wyoming. && .FIRE WEATHER...A storm system over the West Coast this morning will slowly work its way inland today, then across Utah Wednesday into Thursday. For today, expect gusty south winds to develop once again, strongest across southwest Utah where gusts over 40 mph will be common this afternoon. Generally isolated to scattered showers and thunderstorms will linger this morning into this afternoon, focusing mostly across northern Utah. By late afternoon or evening, precipitation will increase from the west. Scattered to numerous showers with isolated to scattered embedded thunderstorms with a good chance (>50%) of wetting rain can be expected over western and northern Utah into Wednesday morning. Wednesday afternoon into Thursday, showers will be more confined to northern Utah. Additionally, temperatures will trend cooler Wednesday into Thursday behind a cold front. Thereafter, a gradually warming and drying trend can be expected into the weekend as high pressure builds into the area. The next storm system will potentially impact the area by the beginning of next week. && .SLC WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... UT...Wind Advisory from 10 AM this morning to 9 PM MDT this evening for UTZ122-123. WY...None. && $$ Cheng/Seaman For more information from NOAA`s National Weather Service visit... http://weather.gov/saltlakecity