FOUS30 KWBC 180800 QPFERD Excessive Rainfall Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 400 AM EDT Mon May 18 2026 Day 1 Valid 12Z Mon May 18 2026 - 12Z Tue May 19 2026 ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF MISSOURI... 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. Elsewhere, the Slight Risk was also expanded well to the east into western Indiana, where a separate area of training thunderstorms is also coming into better agreement in the CAMs guidance. These storms are also most likely to impact the area from about Evansville/Terre Haute north and east to the Indianapolis metro. While amounts won't be nearly as high as areas in the Moderate Risk further west, the proclivity of training convection here should result in widespread 1-3 inch rainfall amounts, requiring the Slight Risk upgrade. Confidence is decreasing into southern Minnesota for significant heavy rain, instead favoring either fast moving storms or a more long-duration light rain. Thus, the Slight Risk was trimmed south out of the Twin Cities metro area. Wegman Day 2 Valid 12Z Tue May 19 2026 - 12Z Wed May 20 2026 ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM THE SOUTHERN PLAINS TO THE LOWER OHIO VALLEY... Relatively few changes were needed for the Day 2 outlook as compared to the changes to the Day 1/Monday period. As the day 2 period enters the CAMs coverage period, there is an unsurprising spread in the guidance as to how the convection will evolve, especially moving just beyond the CAMs period Tuesday night. An axis of heavier rainfall tracking along with the low level jet, will persist from south Texas northeast into the Ohio Valley. Depending on how the rainfall develops this evening in the lower Ohio Valley, and where the areas of heaviest rainfall move in the guidance, a few Slight Risk upgrades may be needed with future updates. Should the storms D1 in Indiana outperform, then the additional rainfall, while far from major, may be able to team up with the newly favorable hydrology to result in more widely scattered instances of flash flooding. The greater threat for a Slight Risk upgrade will be in central Texas, where a maximum of rainfall extends across the Texas Triangle (the area between the Metroplex, San Antonio, and Houston). Given the urban concerns, should there be better agreement in the CAMs as they move to resolve the entire Day 2 period later today, a Slight Risk upgrade may also be needed there. Wegman Day 3 Valid 12Z Wed May 20 2026 - 12Z Thu May 21 2026 ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR A PORTION OF THE TEXAS HILL COUNTRY... The heavy rain footprint not just across Texas but all across the Marginal Risk area is a real mess by the Day 3/Wednesday period. It's likely that the final flooding forecast will be determined by the behaviors of prior convective regions both across Texas and northeast to the mid-Appalachians. Thus, there remains a large Marginal Risk from the southern Plains to the mid-Appalachians. The inherited Slight Risk across west Texas was shrunk and shifted south with this update. Higher rainfall totals are now expected in the Texas Hill Country (but given the fickle nature of convection, this is likely to change a lot over the coming days). This area is particularly flood-prone should heavy rain occur over small and topographically steep river channels common in the Texas Hill Country. Thus, the Slight Risk highlights this higher flooding risk, even though the heavy rainfall footprint in this area remains highly uncertain. Further east, an additional heavy rain area in the ensembles is noted from east Texas, north of Houston east into northern Louisiana. This area is relatively dry with no recent heavy rainfall events, though that could change in some areas after the Day 2/Tuesday period. The heaviest rainfall looks to occur over the Piney Woods, and relatively sparsely populated areas of east Texas and northern Louisiana, so for now, the Marginal Risk covers the flooding threat, but a Slight may be needed if the heavy rainfall shifts into urban areas such as Houston, or if the rainfall forecast increases further in these lesser populated areas. The moisture and instability plume will extend northeast from there, where training storms are possible at times through the Tennessee Valley and into the mountains of West Virginia. Given low FFGs and the flood prone nature of the valleys of WV, the Marginal Risk was expanded there to cover that potential flooding threat. Wegman 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