FOUS30 KWBC 182028 QPFERD Excessive Rainfall Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 428 PM EDT Mon May 18 2026 Day 1 Valid 16Z Mon May 18 2026 - 12Z Tue May 19 2026 ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF MISSOURI, IOWA, NEBRASKA, AND KANSAS... 16Z Update... Coordinated a D1 upgrade to Moderate Risk for portions of northeast Kansas through far southern Iowa as an impressive setup for heavy rain develops this evening and tonight. Large trough to the west will gradually advect eastward, while shortwaves embedded within the flow track northeast into the Ozarks and Central Plains. At the surface, a stationary front will waver across the area, drifing east/west in response to convective outflows and the surging 850mb LLJ. Activity this morning focused across far southeast Kansas into southern Missouri should gradually wane diurnally and shift east in response to the veering of the LLJ, but this decay will likely be slower than "typical" thanks to an improving synoptic evolution to offset the weakening/veering of the LLJ. The moderate risk area for Missouri has remain unchanged, and while there is likely to be a break in the activity late this aftn/eve, a secondary round of heavy rainfall appears likely tonight as development upstream (noted in the next paragraph below) translates southeast back across this region. The more significant change is to expand the moderate west-northwest into the quad-state area from eastern Kansas through far southern Iowa. As the upper trough to the west amplifies and translates slowly eastward, it will shed a shortwave aloft atop the wavering stationary front. At the same time, 850mb southerly flow is expected to locally back and climb to 40-50 kts by this evening, drawing impressive thermodynamics (PWs above 1.75 inches, a record, and MUCAPE above 4000 J/kg) northward. The accompanying theta-e ridge will lift north as well, placing an intense gradient along this front, suggesting a setup that at least marginally matches the conceptual model for Maddox Synoptic heavy rain. As convection re- develops this evening in this area, rainfall rates should quickly reach 1-3"/hr (HREF and REFS probabilities for 2"/hr above 40%), and with Corfidi vectors aligned to the mean 0-6km winds, significant training is likely which could produce (30-50% chance) at least 5 inches of rain. Eventually, as the storms organize upscale into an MCS tonight they should become outflow dominated and progress more rapidly east/southeast, but until that occurs, long- duration training is expected, and even then, additional training is likely on the SW flank of this MCS due to backbuilding convection into the inflow. After coordination with the impacted WFOs, the moderate risk was expanded, and includes the Kansas City metro area, which matches more closely with the recent CSU First Guess field output. Other changes for this D1 update are primarily cosmetic, and include expanding the SLGT risk into Indiana a bit farther eastward and the MRGL deeper into the Ohio Valley. With so much going on D1, left the relevant portion of the previous discussion below. Weiss ...Previous Discussion... In coordination with SGF/Springfield, MO; EAX/Pleasant Hill, MO; and LSX/St Louis, MO forecast offices, a Moderate Risk upgrade was introduced with this update. Much of the CAMs guidance has made a rather drastic shift south of the current line of convection tracking across Kansas and Missouri. There is reasonably good agreement that the line of storms will move into west-central Missouri over the next few hours, then stall out. Corfidi vectors across this part of Missouri essentially drop to light and variable over the next few hours. This combined with an influx of atmospheric moisture, with PWATs increasing up to 1.75 inches, will give the storms additional "juice" to work with in the form of heavy rain. Once the storms stall, the 40 kt southwesterly LLJ will allow for efficient backbuilding of storms along a narrow axis. An ensemble of models highlight the new Moderate Risk area for the most likely axis where the backbuilding will be most efficient. The result is several models highlighting extreme rainfall amounts, with the RRFS the highest at over 9 inches. On average, most peak the heaviest rainfall amounts between 5 and 7 inches. Despite dry soils in the area, this amount of rain over a 6 hour period, combined with topographic effects, will lead to numerous instances of flash flooding, resulting in the Moderate Risk upgrade. The Moderate Risk is a double upgrade (from Marginal) in all areas from the inherited forecast, with the southern sliver of the Moderate perhaps a triple upgrade. This extreme shift in the forecast unfortunately has much to do with the CAMs struggling to resolve rapidly evolving convective patterns well. The heavy rain is likely to begin in the Moderate Risk area over the next few hours, with the early period (between 12-18Z/7am to 1pm CDT) being the period with the most likely chances of seeing multiple inch per hour rates, and the Moderate Risk getting the most rainfall of the day. There should be a break in the rainfall during the evening and most of the overnight, before a second much more progressive line of storms possibly impacts this same area for a much shorter time in the 09Z to 12Z time frame tonight. This second line of storms will impact the hard-hit areas from northeast Kansas to southwest Iowa during the late afternoon and evening before shifting southeast across Missouri. Some training will also be possible here before the storms organize, and given the more favorable hydrology, the higher-end Slight remains in place from Kansas City north and west through the southeastern corner of Nebraska. Wegman Day 2 Valid 12Z Tue May 19 2026 - 12Z Wed May 20 2026 ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE CENTRAL TEXAS HILL COUNTRY AND OHIO RIVER VALLEY... The main changes to the overnight forecast include a broadening of the Marginal Risk, and introduction of embedded Slight Risk areas over the Texas Hill Country and Ohio Valley. A relatively stagnant synoptic pattern will continue through Day 2 as a positively tilted mean trough slowly evolves over the Western U.S. This configuration should maintain modest southwest flow over the Central/Eastern U.S. to support a corridor of heavy rainfall ahead of a northeast to southwest oriented cold front. Toward the beginning of Day 2, thunderstorms are expected to develop along the cold front as it enters the Southern Plains and interacts with a moist and unstable airmass characterized by 2000-3000 J/kg and 1.6-1.8" PW. Fairly weak and unidirectional cloud layer wind profiles atop a lingering 20-30 kt nocturnal low- level jet suggest this convection along the front will have a tendency to train before propagating southward with the initiating boundary. The HREF and RRFS suggest hourly rainfall rates will eclipse 2"/hr at times in the main axis of convection, which should initially support isolated flash flooding during the day. The greatest concern for excessive rainfall, however, will materialize late tomorrow afternoon as the cold front enters the Texas Hill Country and bisects a well-defined dryline. The resultant east- west axis of thunderstorms will eventually grow upscale and train within the very unstable and modestly sheared airmass. From late Tuesday into early Wednesday, the HREF and RRFS are in good agreement for increasing probabilities of 2-3"/hr rainfall rates, which could lead to rainfall totals upwards of 3-5" by Wednesday morning. When combined with the sensitive nature of the Hill Country and urban areas in the Texas Triangle, a Slight Risk was introduced in this update. Otherwise, a separate Slight Risk area was introduced over portions of the Ohio Valley as thunderstorms develop along the slow moving front tomorrow afternoon. While weak height rises forecast in the vicinity of the front could limit thunderstorm coverage somewhat, forecast soundings featuring moist vertical profiles (1.8-2.0" PW), 3000-4000 J/kg of MUCAPE, and unidirectional flow suggest the storms that develop should be quite efficient and slow to propagate in the new Slight Risk area. This scenario is supported by the HREF and RRFS, which depict increasing chances of hourly rainfall rates eclipsing 2-3"/hr by late tomorrow afternoon. As this activity overlaps with ongoing heavy rainfall in the region, scattered flash flooding could result. Asherman Day 3 Valid 12Z Wed May 20 2026 - 12Z Thu May 21 2026 ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF SOUTH-CENTRAL TEXAS INCLUDING THE HILL COUNTRY AND EDWARDS PLATEAU... The Day 3 excessive rainfall risk is really just a translation slightly southward of the Day 2 risk area due to a slowly evolving synoptic pattern. A large positively tilted trough positioned across the Intermountain West and back into the Great Basin will gradually amplify but maintain its NE to SW orientation. Gradually pinching mid-level flow will help funnel additional moisture northeast from the Pacific across the Southern Plains and into the Ohio Valley/Central Appalachians. Within this flow, subtle shortwave impulses lifting through the flow will help enhance ascent, aiding low-level convergence along a nearly stalled front draped from Ohio through Texas. At the same time, locally backing low-level flow from the south at 850mb will converge into the front, producing impressive moisture convergence along the front in a region of PWs that are progged to be 1.5 to 1.75 inches. Although inflow may be somewhat modest (850mb winds around 20 kts), this will be sufficient within the moist column to provide plentiful advection to support widespread convection with rainfall rates above 1"/hr nearly certain. Although there continues to be uncertainty into the exact placement of the heaviest rainfall due to prior-day convection which will cause wavering of the surface boundary, 0-6km mean winds becoming increasingly boundary-parallel will support training of these rainfall rates, and the SREF/ECENS/GEFS all suggest at least a low-end risk (5-10%) of 3"/24 hrs around the updated SLGT risk region. While this in itself may not force widespread FFG exceedance, much of this rainfall D3 will fall atop areas that are expected to receive significant rainfall as well D2, so the SLGT risk was drawn to account for compounding impacts potential over already vulnerable terrain features. Farther northeast, the MRGL risk was cosmetically adjusted for new guidance as convection with heavy rainfall will likely repeat from SW to NE along the front as it slowly sags southward through the Tennessee and Ohio River Valleys. Weiss 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