FOUS30 KWBC 250750 QPFERD Excessive Rainfall Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 350 AM EDT Mon May 25 2026 Day 1 Valid 12Z Mon May 25 2026 - 12Z Tue May 26 2026 ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE CENTRAL GULF COAST TOWARD THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS... ...Gulf Coast to Southern Appalachians... Stagnant upper level pattern across much of the CONUS is allowing for a continued confluent axis situated from the Central Gulf Coast up through the Mid Atlantic states with ample moisture comprised of PWAT anomalies running between +1 to +2.5 deviations above normal within the aforementioned zone. Prevailing southerly flow in-of the Central Gulf Coast will allow for the advection of yet another mid-level pulse out of the Gulf by the beginning of the period with sights on southeast LA through the Southeast U.S. Increasing instances of heavy rainfall from convective development spurred by the disturbance and deep moisture presence will invoke yet another round of flash flood potential, mainly within those urbanized zones littered across southeast LA up through southern MS, much of AL, and eventually into GA by the afternoon time frame. Instability parameters are well-within the mode to drive heavy rain prospects with many of the forecast point soundings indicating appreciable tall-skinny CAPE outputs historically prevalent for heavy rainfall potential and enhanced rates. 00z HREF neighborhood probs for >3" are running between 40-80% in the corridor expanding from New Orleans to the I-20 corridor in AL with the bullseye focused over southwestern AL towards the MS border. This zone has been consistently signaled as the primary focus of heavier precipitation in-part to multiple convective episodes in the period that could very well put down 3-5+" of rainfall prior to the end of the D1. Despite higher FFG's locally, rainfall rates between 2-3"/hr with higher intra-hour rates are likely given the PWAT's between 1.8-2.1" over the course of the D1, a good proxy for those higher end totals locally, especially in any repeatedly impacted areas. This environment is respectable for the time of year and regional instability parameters are more than sufficient for even scattered heavy cell cores focused away from the shortwave migration anticipated. All CAMs have some instances of heavy rain across the Southeast U.S. extending to as far north as the Tennessee Valley and as far east as southeast GA into portions of the SC Low Country. A SLGT risk remains forecast for the area of southeast LA up through the Southern Appalachians and neighboring Piedmont in SC and all zones in-between. MRGL risk expands away on either side encompassing a broad area outside the SLGT. ...Mid Atlantic... Remnant quasi-stationary front across the Central to Southern Mid Atlantic will slowly lift north through the day Monday with increasing moisture profiles being advected from southerly low to mid-level flow around the northern periphery of a ridge in the Western Atlantic. PWAT anomalies will shove closer to +2 to +3 deviations across a good portion of VA, especially areas south of I-66 down to the VA Tidewater where PWATs are forecast to jump above 2" as expressed via multiple global ensemble outputs. This would set up a pretty deep warm cloud layer sufficient for higher rainfall rates for any convective pulses that arise during the forecast. The proximity of the front will be a focal point for enhanced low-level convergence which can be seen very well within the theta_E and omega cross-sections off both the 00z NAM Nest and HRRR runs this evening. Pretty much all guidance has a narrow, yet prolific corridor of heavy rain of convective origin aligned near and just south of the front by later this afternoon and evening with a steady stream of rainfall likely to cause some localized areas of 2-4+" in the time frame of impact. Pending the model of preference, some hit the corridor from Richmond to Hampton Roads pretty hard while others are just a bit north, closer to the northern neck of the Tidewater. In any case, either pathway would be sufficient for flash flood prospects, even with the ongoing drought in the area. Rainfall of 1-2"/hr will be likely in the heavier cells with even some stronger cores capable of brief 2-3"/hr periods when you factor the anomalous deep moisture layer in place. If it was not for such elevated FFG's, this would likely be a higher risk, but for now, maintained continuity with a MRGL, but will have to monitor for exact placement of the repeating convection as that could be enough to tip the scales to a focused higher risk, especially if the immediate Tidewater is impacted as that area has historically been flash flood prone due to more sprawling urbanization and poor drainage capabilities. ...Texas into New Mexico... Couple of areas of interest across the Southwestern U.S. into the Southern Plains for Monday. The first is within the bounds of a remnant MCV that continues to cause issues across Central and Northern TX as it drifts over the northern Hill Country, west of I-35 between San Angelo and Fort Worth. Spells of heavy rain continue to plague this zone with cells popping up over the course of the evening as focused low-level convergence and available moisture aids in these scattered, slow-moving thunderstorms capable of multiple inches of rainfall as they drift over the area. CAMs are split on the handling of this feature heading through the morning and afternoon today, but the models that do maintain organization of the MCV tend to have another scattered to widespread convective enhancement during the diurnal instability max leading to pockets of enhanced rainfall between 2-4" in wake of the cells. Modest neighborhood probs from the 00z HREF for >2" (20-40%) exist in this relative corridor of the Concho Valley into north-central Hill Country between San Angelo and Fort Worth. With the MCV likely to exhibit little forward propagation, areas that were hit this evening could see more in the way of convection this afternoon, so long as the MCV holds together and doesn't dissipate as indicated via some guidance. Considering the variables at play and the potential to be a sneakier setup overall, wanted to gauge a conservative approach and add a MRGL risk to the area referenced above to cover for the threat. Further west, we have a different setup that will induced by a favorably developing upper trough/closed-low scenario coming out of a negatively tilted shortwave trough ejecting out of the Desert Southwest during the period. Height-falls are all but certain within all model output with the shortwave progression likely develop something more formidable as it encroaches on NM by later this afternoon. Enhanced upper forcing and well-defined surface trough bisecting far western TX up through eastern NM and the divide will provide the necessary focused ascent features capable for scattered to widespread convective development during peak diurnal instability and beyond as the upper forcing pattern becomes most favorable by the evening. Probabilities for rainfall rates >1"/hr remain highest within the confines of the surface trough as indicated in the latest 00z HREF prob fields. The Sacramento Mountains, adjacent High Plains of eastern NM down into the Upper Trans Pecos are the most favored areas of heavy rainfall with secondary maxima plausible in far west TX across the terrain in the Guadalupe Mountains down to portions of the Davis and Delaware Mountains in Southwest TX. The previous MRGL risk was expanded to include more of the area comprised of at least modest probabilities for >1" of precip, as well the more favored areas for rates >1"/hr, at times during the period of interest. Kleebauer Day 2 Valid 12Z Tue May 26 2026 - 12Z Wed May 27 2026 ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF THE CENTRAL GULF COAST, AND CENTRAL TO WEST TEXAS... ...Texas... The previous D1 evolution will translate into a greater convective regime as we head into D2 as the negatively-tilted trough axis migrates further east into the Southern High Plains with a broad diffluent axis pointed downstream of the mean trough. Increased large scale ascent will become fixated over much of west TX, spreading through the High Plains as widespread shower and thunderstorm activity takes shape during the afternoon Tuesday. A plethora of convective activity with relatively slow to modest propagation speeds will translate into bouts of heavier rainfall across the southern half of the TX Panhandle down through the Permian Basin, western Rolling Plains, Concho Valley, and Stockton Plateau leading to widespread 1+" totals with embedded 2-3" spots given the convective regime. This setup is classic for scattered flash flood instances, especially in those more urban zones and areas of high low water crossing concentrations that are littered over the Southern High Plains in west TX. The 00z HREF signal for the 12z Tue to 00z Wed period is very aggressive for at least 2" in spots over the Permian Basin and adjacent Caprock, including the Lubbock/Midland urban centers. Rainfall will likely be winding down in these areas, but the setup will proceed to be more of a nocturnal issue as we pivot our attention south over the Big Bend and central RGV as a strong mid-level vorticity maxima ejects out of Coahuila Tuesday evening and slides east into the Edwards Plateau and neighboring Hill Country. There's a general consensus on this setup across guidance with some degree of broad heavy convection migrating into the above areas enticing a dousing of rainfall as the pattern evolves overnight. We'll see the introduction of a LLJ only add to the low-level convergence regime spurred on by the expected evolution likely allowing quite the rainfall signature in wake of the disturbance's trajectory. US57 to I-10 is the prospectus area of interest, which includes much of southern and central Hill Country with the very end of the period likely to see some of the activity make it towards the I-35 corridor near San Antonio. With the time frame outside of the CAMs range, greater details aren't available for the maximum potential in the forecast, but just given the current environment conditions, there could be some localized areas >3" in this second round of enhanced convection this period. The SLGT risk from the previous forecast remains in effect, but will be monitoring for any opportunity of a targeted higher risk, or at least a higher-end threshold of the current SLGT. ...Gulf Coast and Southeast... Confluent area on the western edge of a broad Western Atlantic ridge and a trough centered over the Southern Plains will continue for at least one more period with another round of convergence and heavy convection focused over the Central Gulf Coast to areas inland between southeast MS into the southern half of AL. This area will have seen multiple days of impact from heavier convection to begin with, so some priming of the soils could enact a greater flash flood potential in general. This setup seems to be less favored compared to the previous days, but still the guidance remains favorable for 2-4" locally in the aforementioned areas which would be enough to cause some scattered flash flood concerns in those heavier cells that crop up. The general consensus seems to target southern AL as the main focus with the area from Biloxi over to Mobile and points north as the target of opportunity when you assess the HREF blended mean QPF output and associated prob fields for the 12z Tue to 00z Wed period. In any case, this is still well within the standards of a SLGT risk which was maintained from the previous forecast. Kleebauer Day 3 Valid 12Z Wed May 27 2026 - 12Z Thu May 28 2026 ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE EASTERN HALF OF TEXAS, ARKLATEX, AND PORTIONS OF THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY... The broad upper level evolution occurring upstream over the Southern Plains will continue to shift east with the large scale forcing driving into the eastern half of TX leading to heavy rain prospects over the eastern portions of Hill Country, the I-35 corridor and much of east TX, including the middle and upper TX coastal areas. There's still some discrepancy in specifics on where the heaviest precip will occur in this setup, but the mean QPF output via various ensembles, including the National Blend and ensemble bias corrected QPF targets the I-35 corridor over to the Lower Mississippi Valley fairly heavily, considering the fact we are still at D3. Widespread 1-3" totals are forecast within the means with the environment favored for heavy precipitation basically anywhere over the above areas referenced. A broad SLGT risk is in place to encompass the area of potential, however some fine tuning is likely to occur as we approach the period, especially as we get more CAMs involved and we monitor how the upstream pattern is evolving which will be the ultimate player in the magnitude of rainfall and where. Kleebauer 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