FOUS30 KWBC 150903 QPFERD Excessive Rainfall Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 503 AM EDT Mon Jun 15 2026 Day 1 Valid 12Z Mon Jun 15 2026 - 12Z Tue Jun 16 2026 ...THERE ARE MODERATE RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF THE TEXAS GULF COAST AND SOUTH TEXAS AS WELL AS FOR A PORTION OF WEST- CENTRAL MISSISSIPPI... ...Texas Gulf Coast and South Texas... A very impressive setup for flash flooding will begin to unfold along the Gulf Coast of Texas today, and will continue into future days. The impressive ingredient is the sheer amount of moisture that will be advecting north into south Texas and the Gulf coast over the next few days in advance of a potent upper level low, some of the remnants of former east Pacific tropical storm Cristina. PWATs advecting into deep south Texas are likely to broach close to record territory today, as they climb to as high as 2.75 inches. This is a function of well above normal sea-surface temperatures in the Gulf adding low-level moisture, and preexisting upper level moisture from Cristina. The combination of these could fully saturate the atmosphere up to the tropopause, with melting layers as high as 17,000 ft. This will make any storms that develop in this environment having an almost unnatural ability to produce heavy rain. As the aforementioned upper level disturbance approaches and lee cyclogenesis begins east of the Mexico mountains tonight, expect multiple rounds of storms across Deep South Texas to impact the area. A westward moving band may start off around peak heating this afternoon, then as the disturbance approaches tonight, a nearly stationary or slowly eastward moving band is expected to develop overnight tonight which will persist for much of the night as competing forcings create an area of low level convergence over Deep South Texas. There is some uncertainty as to where this convergence sets up, but it appears it's most likely closer to the Rio Grande Valley on the western side of Deep South Texas. Given the incredible moisture available for the storms, localized cells could produce rainfall rates as high as 5 inches per hour, with 3 inch/hour rates common. Despite dry soils going in, these incredible rain rates will easily overwhelm the areas experiencing them, resulting in widespread and locally catastrophic flash flooding, especially in any towns or cities that experience an extended duration of rainfall rates of that magnitude. Further north, the north-south oriented bands over Deep South Texas will impact a strong but slow-moving cold front drifting southeastward towards the Texas Gulf Coast. This will funnel the prodigious moisture northeastward paralleling the coast. The storms will follow, resulting in training. As in Deep South Texas, despite slightly, and I mean only slightly lower PWATs, rainfall rates to 3 in/hr will be common with localized rates to 5 inches/hour here as well. FFGs are significantly lower from Corpus Christi northeast to Houston as compared with further south down the coast, thus, these prodigious rainfall rates will have no trouble exceeding FFGs. Frictional convergence of the onshore flow and the front will make for nearly stationary bands of storms along much of the middle Texas Coast. Thus, expect storm total rainfall amounts today easily exceeding 3 inches, but localized amounts will be much higher, perhaps approaching 8 inches, as noted by the HREF probabilities. With some uncertainty as to how prolific the storm total rainfall amounts will be, the Moderate Risk may need to continue to be upgraded in the hardest hit areas through the day, especially if those include urban areas from Brownsville through Houston. ...West-Central Mississippi... The same incredible moisture plume as over Texas is already in place across all of Louisiana and southern Mississippi this morning. The same front as in Texas will be even stronger to the east in Louisiana and Mississippi. Thus, with southwesterly LLJ flow into this front, expect numerous thunderstorms to develop across northern Louisiana and west-central Mississippi by midday today. The storms will run into a "wall" that is the cold front, forcing them to turn eastward, resulting in a well-defined line of storms along the frontal interface. It appears this is most likely to occur along the I-20 corridor. The heaviest rains will occur from midday through sunset, after which there may be a break before more scattered convection redevelops in the early morning hours of Tuesday. Multiple inch per hour rates are likely with these storms as well due to the deep moisture with PWATs at record territory between 2.25 and 2.5 inches. Portions of western Mississippi have been recently hard hit with heavy rains, resulting in wet soils, and the Jackson area due to urban concerns is also vulnerable to flash flooding due to heavy rainfall. In coordination with the JAN/Jackson, MS forecast office, a Moderate Risk upgrade has been introduced. While soils are less supportive of flooding further west into northern Louisiana, persistent multiple inch/hour rates along the I-20 corridor could result in an expansion of the Moderate Risk with future updates. Wegman Day 2 Valid 12Z Tue Jun 16 2026 - 12Z Wed Jun 17 2026 ...THERE ARE MODERATE RISKS OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE ENTIRE TEXAS GULF COAST AS WELL AS FOR WEST-CENTRAL MISSISSIPPI... ...Texas Gulf Coast... A plume of incredibly deep tropical moisture over the entire Texas Gulf Coast will be in place at the start of the period Tuesday morning. Ongoing lee cyclogenesis in advance of a strong upper level disturbance will support continuous numerous showers and thunderstorms in the onshore flow up the western coast of the Gulf and into the Texas Gulf Coast. This disturbance will further increase the amount of moisture available for the storms, as PWATs rise to record territory in some areas, possibly exceeding 2.75 inches. Any and all storms that continue to develop ahead of the low will be capable of multiple inch/hour rainfall rates, despite the reduced instability in the early morning. When added to Monday's rains, flash flooding is likely to continue all along the Texas Gulf Coast until the low itself, which will track northeastward roughly parallel to the coast passes a given longitude, switching the wind direction from onshore southward to offshore northwestward. Since the low will be barely moving, a steady onshore flow across the middle and upper Texas Gulf Coasts will continue to favor training storms impacting coastal areas, with the Houston Metro remaining particularly vulnerable. Meanwhile for the lower Texas coast, once the low moves offshore, the northwesterly flow will dramatically decrease storm coverage and intensity, though not completely shut it off due to the deep moisture still in place even behind the low, with the front lagging behind along the Rio Grande. There is considerable uncertainty as to the northern and western extent of the rainfall threat on Tuesday. The cold front bringing much drier air will continue its progress south and east across South Texas, so the threat will end from west to east during the day. Meanwhile extensive cloud cover should limit instability well away from the coast. Thus, the storms will have a progressively narrowing portion of the Texas Gulf Coast that they will be able to impact. Regardless, heavy rain will continue to impact the Lower Texas Coast from the D1 period into Tuesday morning, and the heavy rains will continue further up the coast throughout the period. This supports a continuation of the Moderate Risk into the southwest corner of Louisiana. ...West Central Mississippi... Heavy rains across western Mississippi are likely to redevelop in the same area along the I-20 corridor during peak heating Tuesday afternoon, and perhaps in some areas never completely stop Tuesday morning from any overnight rainfall. The front driving the heaviest rainfall with the strongest storms will be completely stationary over Mississippi, whereas in Louisiana and points west, it will continue painfully slow south and eastward progress. Thus, when storms refire Tuesday afternoon, they will be over many of the same hard hit areas of central Mississippi as on Monday. Further east, on Monday the storms will align east-southeastward from western Mississippi to northern Florida. By Tuesday however, northward progress of the front as a warm front will allow the heaviest rains to impact further north into Alabama and Georgia. Despite a lack of rain on Monday, the still wet soils across central Alabama towards Birmingham and Montgomery may require an eastward extension of the Moderate Risk area into central Alabama. Regardless it appears western Mississippi will still be the area that gets the most rain, especially over the combined 2 day period. Rains in west central Mississippi should diminish with loss of daytime heating Tuesday night with lingering storms pressing southeastward toward southern Alabama and the Florida Panhandle Tuesday night. Wegman Day 3 Valid 12Z Wed Jun 17 2026 - 12Z Thu Jun 18 2026 ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR THE UPPER TEXAS GULF COAST INTO SOUTHWEST LOUISIANA... ...Upper Texas Gulf Coast into Southwest Louisiana... A potent upper level disturbance which includes some of the upper level remnants of former East Pacific tropical storm Cristina will interact with an incredibly deep moisture plume over the western Gulf to continue a multiple day heavy rainfall event over a small portion of the upper Texas Gulf Coast on Wednesday. The disturbance itself will make better forward progress during the period, moving from off South Padre Island at the start of the period into western Louisiana by Thursday morning. Immediately in advance of the center of this low, heavy rains will continue into the upper Texas Gulf coast and the Houston metro from the D2/Tuesday period. The axis of heaviest rainfall through the day is likely to be directed east of Houston, along the Texas/Louisiana border near Beaumont. Thus, this area is likely to see the worst impacts from flash flooding overall through the day. The strongest storms will become increasingly tied to the movement of the surface low and attendant upper level shortwave, as the front that plagued much of Texas will follow behind the low, clearing much of the rest of the state from heavy rains for a brief time. Across the South, the front that was stalled from central Mississippi through Georgia the past few days will dissipate entirely in advance of the next strong cold front. tracking across the Midwest. There remains considerable uncertainty as to how fast the low will track up the Texas Gulf Coast towards the lower Mississippi Valley. A faster progression may require a northeastward expansion of the Slight to cover more of central Louisiana, and if even a bit faster still, would re-impact western Mississippi late Wednesday night, requiring a significant upgrade from the current blank ERO for that area. Thus, significant changes are probable with future updates. Since the upper Texas Coast area will have been hard hit on 2 consecutive days prior to Wednesday, the Moderate Risk continuation into Wednesday was needed due to likely ongoing heavy rains through the period. While there's better certainty into southwest Louisiana for Moderate Risk level heavy rains, the Houston Metro was included in coordination with HGX/Houston, TX forecast office due to uncertainty largely on Wednesday morning as to how far west the heavy rain shield will extend at that time. ...Midwest... A potent area of low pressure over the Plains at the start of the period will progress east across the Midwest at a rather fast clip through the day on Wednesday. As the low moves into the mid- Mississippi Valley, it will increasingly tap into the large moisture plume present across much of the Southeast. The low will create its own moisture feed allowing the moisture to rapidly advect into the Midwest ahead of the low. The area from northern Illinois into Indiana has also been hard hit by periodic rounds of heavy rain in recent days, allowing for moist soils and high river levels to remain. Light rains at times are expected in the area Tuesday afternoon and evening, but due to lack of moisture, no significant flash flooding concerns are expected then. By Day 3/Wednesday however, the tap into the Gulf moisture will change all that. Numerous showers and thunderstorms will develop along the cold front ahead of the low as PWATs rise well above 1.5 inches, reaching as high as 2 inches at times. This will support storms capable of 1-3 inch per hour rainfall rates Wednesday afternoon through the overnight. The storms will be very fast moving, which will reduce the flooding threat, but the aforementioned moist soils, urban concerns, and increasing availability of deep moisture will all support the potential for widely scattered instances of flash flooding. Expect a warm front to move across the area around midday to early afternoon, then a strong cold front to move through late afternoon through the evening, which may consist of one or 2 lines of storms. These lines of storms in rapid succession could support training- like effects as far as flash flooding potential. Given the very favorable hydrology for flash flooding, it's possible targeted Moderate Risk upgrades may be needed for portions of the area, particularly northern Illinois into northern Indiana, where a higher-end Slight is in effect. Wegman Day 4 and Day 5 Valid 12Z Thu Jun 18 2026 - 12Z Sat Jun 20 2026 ...THERE IS A MODERATE SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY & CENTRAL GULF COAST ON DAY 4... Attention is on the multi-day Excessive Rainfall threat in the Deep South where an abundance of tropical moisture will engulf areas from southeast TX to as far east as GA. There are notable timing differences across guidance on the placement of the heaviest rainfall, and this will come down in large part to the development of the low-level disturbance in the western Gulf. Both its development and track will likely be troublesome for guidance to key in on for another 24-36 hours until the circulation is formed over South TX. That said, the region in total will have witnessed multiple rounds of Excessive Rainfall, particularly east TX, central and northern LA, and into western MS in lead up to Day 4. The 12Z ECMWF EFI showed a notable overlap of >0.7 signals from southwest LA on east into central MS, including at least a 2 contour on the Shift of Tails. In collaboration with several WFOs along the central Gulf Coast and the Lower MS Valley, a Moderate Risk was issued to account for the concerns of additional Excessive Rainfall over areas that will likely be dealing with ongoing flash flooding in the days leading up to Thursday. It is worth noting that the same axis of anomalous moisture in the South will stream north into the TN/OH Valleys. These areas will have the benefit of strong synoptic-scale forcing to produce widespread thunderstorms. A Slight Risk stretches as far north as southwest PA to account for flash flooding in these more flash flood prone areas. Day 5 will see a weak 500mb trough axis over central TX tap into lingering tropical moisture along the Gulf Coast. Lower pressures over the Rio grande and persistent high pressure east of the Bahamas will maintain the seemingly endless moisture tap emanating out of the Bay of Campeche. Moisture out ahead of the upper trough will also collide with a frontal boundary that will extend across much of the South. The future of the upper-level feature that originated over South TX early in the week may also still play a key role in Excessive Rainfall, especially from southern LA on east into northern GA. Accounting for various ensemble guidance tonight, there is a sufficient signal for Excessive Rainfall in areas across the South that received copious amounts of rainfall the first four days of the work-week to be concerned for more scattered instance of flash flooding that could be locally significant. A Slight Risk was issued from the Lower Rio Grande Valley to as far east as the Appalachians of northern GA. Mullinax 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 $$