FOUS30 KWBC 250751 QPFERD Excessive Rainfall Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 351 AM EDT Sat Apr 25 2026 Day 1 Valid 12Z Sat Apr 25 2026 - 12Z Sun Apr 26 2026 ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE ARKLATEX REGION INTO EASTERN OKLAHOMA AND SOUTHEAST KANSAS... Very strong instability is likely to develop later today across the southern Plains as a consequence of considerable northward moisture advection. Convective initiation may be delayed until around or after 00Z as it will take time to erode an inversion. Eventually this is expected to give way to scattered supercells, which should then grow into convective clusters and progress to the southeast during the overnight hours. The environment will be supportive of heavy rain rates to around 2 inches per hour with PW values around 1.5 inches (90th percentile for late April in the region). Flash flooding would be possible where these rain rates can be sustained for a couple hours; that would be most likely to occur via cell mergers leading to brief periods of training. A targeted upgrade to a Slight Risk may be needed later today, as there is a chance for more focused training and backbuilding along a composite outflow boundary and warm front that will gradually be pushing north into southeast Oklahoma and southwest Arkansas. While models have come into better agreement on the location of this boundary, and the relatively strong low-level convergence associated with it, many models also show somewhat limited convective coverage, which would reduce opportunities for training and a focused corridor of heavy rainfall. If greater development along and near the boundary becomes apparent, the alignment of shear vectors with the boundary orientation would increase the risk of flash flooding and may warrant an upgrade. Another area of higher QPF values (1-2 inches) is forecast from the Poconos into the greater New York City area today and tonight. This area was not outlooked in the ERO as the rain is expected via steady light-moderate rain for much of the day, with a lack of instability and chances of even 0.5 inch per hour rain rates negligible to nil. Therefore, any impacts from the rain would not be expected to be of the flash flood variety. Lamers Day 2 Valid 12Z Sun Apr 26 2026 - 12Z Mon Apr 27 2026 ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IN THE CENTRAL PLAINS... Strong cyclogenesis in the central Plains on Sunday will facilitate significant northward moisture transport and a more expansive area of thunderstorm activity in the region. The most notable change to the existing outlook was to reduce the size of the Marginal Risk and focus it more directly in the Central Plains. That is where the forcing is expected to be strongest: the left exit region of an upper level jet and strong positive vorticity advection. Further south, in Oklahoma and Arkansas, the trend in QPF guidance has been drier, with expectations for weaker forcing and less favorable low-level lapse rates associated with a warm nose. Some models keep areas that far south almost completely dry now; therefore the Marginal Risk has been removed and focused further north. Where the risk area still exists, the primary question at this point will be the amount of available instability. More unstable scenarios could support convective clusters with higher rain rates (in excess of 1 inch per hour) that could lead to isolated flash flooding. Scenarios with less instability could limit rain rates. Given these uncertainties, expect further refinement of the outlook in subsequent updates. Although some potential for heavy rain exists from central Nebraska into central South Dakota in some guidance, flash flood guidance is much higher in those locations, so the northwest extent of the Marginal Risk was constrained by the presence of less favorable soil conditions. Lamers Day 3 Valid 12Z Mon Apr 27 2026 - 12Z Tue Apr 28 2026 ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER NORTHERN ILLINOIS AND FAR SOUTHERN WISCONSIN... A deep cyclone will continue to make steady progress northeastward on Monday from the central Plains into the western Great Lakes. A broad 50-60 knot low-level jet to the east of the cyclone and accompanying cold front will continue significant northward moisture transport with 1 inch PW likely to extend to the Canadian border and 1.5 inch PW potentially reaching to southern Wisconsin. This would place most of the Mississippi Valley firmly in the 90-95th percentile for PW in late April. This will support relatively high rain rates in the abundant convection expected along and ahead of the aforementioned cold front. This is reflected in a broad Marginal Risk over much of the Middle and Upper Mississippi Valley. The risk is held at that level for most of the region due to the expectation for relatively narrow squall lines forced by the cold front as the primary contributer to rainfall over the 24-hour period. Those squall lines should steadily (or even rapidly) advance eastward and that would limit the duration of heavy rainfall at any one location. Rain rates will be high enough that isolated flash flooding is still possible. A Slight Risk was introduced in a small area of northern Illinois and far southern Wisconsin where there is an overlap of higher probabilities of 2+ inch rainfall (25-40 percent per NBM v5.0) and anomalously high streamflow and soil moisture due to significant rainfall over the past couple weeks. While the risk of flash flooding is slightly higher in these areas, the same limitation of relatively fast progression of thunderstorms described above still applies. Additionally, there is some uncertainty about the degree of instability this far north; an easterly component to the low- level flow may advect more stable air from the cool Lake Michigan into adjacent land areas. Models that embrace that scenario tend to show a rapid decay of convection as it progresses east into southern Wisconsin and northern Illinois, so this will need to be monitored as details come into focus. Nevertheless, enough signal for heavy rainfall exists in an area of increased vulnerability to justify higher ERO probabilities with this update. Lamers Day 1 threat area: https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/94epoints.txt Day 2 threat area: https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/98epoints.txt Day 3 threat area: https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/99epoints.txt