Select NOAA-NWS Forecast Office Text Products
(Product availability varies with seasons, forecast office, and weather.)
Forecast Discussion for Indianapolis, IN
To Select Another NWS Office Click on Map or Choose from List
|
| Select Forecast Office: | Select Product: |
031 FXUS63 KIND 170430 AFDIND Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Indianapolis IN 1230 AM EDT Sun May 17 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Isolated to scattered showers and storms possible tonight - Storm chances return Monday along with much warmer than normal temperatures Sunday through Tuesday with highs in the 80s. - A frontal passage Tuesday into early Wednesday will bring additional chances of severe storms along with cooler and drier weather for the later part of next week. && .FORECAST UPDATE... Issued at 955 PM EDT Sat May 16 2026 The severe weather threat has diminished across central IN as the environment is convectively overturned. Current KIND radar imagery depicts lingering light precipitation across south-central IN with quiet conditions further north. Expect the light rain to continue shifting east and taper off over the next few hours. Subtle warm air advection from a weak warm front lifting north will then support the potential for isolated to scattered showers and storms. Some guidance suggest patchy fog could develop overnight. Slightly elevated surface flow should limit the development of fog, but sheltered locations where winds are weaker could see patchy fog. Muggy dewpoints will keep temperatures mild overnight in the low to mid 60s. && .DISCUSSION (This evening through Saturday)... Issued at 355 PM EDT Sat May 16 2026 Tonight.... Convection tied to the MCV will continue to move eastward before gradually diminish late evening. Threat for isolated severe winds/hail will be possible through 02Z /10 PM EDT/. Overnight, a slowly NE moving warm front combined with a 30-40 kt low level jet will likely support renewed elevated convective development after 05Z. PoPs have been raised a category to account for this increasing potential. Sunday/Sunday Night... Scattered TS will come to an end early Sunday (before 15Z) as the warm front lifts northward. Gusty S-SW winds will develop by late morning lasting into the afternoon owing to an increasing surface pressure gradient and modest low level flow in the boundary layer. High temps are expected to easily rise in the 80s area wide by afternoon with 850 temps around 17-18C. Combined with dewpoints in the lwo-mid 60s, heat indices are expected to be in the mid-upper 80s, close to the warmest apparent temps since late March. Skies are expected to be mostly clear Sunday and Sunday night with just afternoon cumulus and increasing cirrus overnight from Plains thunderstorm activity. Monday/Monday Night... Model consensus is that a relatively innocuous mid level vort max/lead shortwave trough associated with the southern jetstream /per sat off of Baja CA coast/ will move NE across Mexico and TX and into the Ozarks/Mid MS valley by Monday afternoon. With weak inhibition and moderate instability /MLCAPE around 2000 J/KG/ noted on forecast soundings, scattered TS are expected for form just west of central IN during the mid-late afternoon. Weak 0-6 km shear will limit threat for more significant severe threat, but moderate anvil venting and low level flow may support a low end hail/damaging wind threat if activity can become organized linearly. This activity is expected to weaken overnight Monday night with loss of heating amidst weak forcing. High temps on Monday are once again expected to be well above normal, despite some increase in clouds cover with 80s areawide. Tuesday/Tuesday Night... A cold front will push southward across the plains and upper Midwest, however timing of the front is somewhat uncertain 3 days out. Thunderstorm activity is expected to be numerous along the front with deep layer forcing and moderate instability /CAPE 2000-3000 J/KG/. Convective mode is expected to be fairly linear convective with damaging winds the primary threat, per the SPC Day 4 slight risk outlook. In addition, locally heavy rainfall may lead to minor flooding. Wednesday into Saturday.... The primary cold front is expected to push across central Indiana early on Wednesday. In the wake of the front, cooler and drier air is expected through Thursday. Thereafter, there is some disagreement with the strength of the shortwave trough moving into the Rockies and Plains and the consequent timing and coverage of additional precip development moving back into central Indiana going into the Memorial Day weekend/500 festivities. High temps are expected to be below normal Wed and Thursday rising to near normal by Saturday. && .AVIATION (06Z TAF Issuance)... Issued at 1230 AM EDT Sun May 17 2026 Impacts: - Southerly gusts peaking at 20 to 25kt this afternoon Discussion: Cloud debris lingers over the region early this morning from earlier convection. Will see high clouds persist through the rest of the night as a warm front slowly lifts north through central Indiana. The threat for convection through daybreak has lowered with the atmosphere heavily worked over from storms on Saturday. Cannot rule out scattered convection in the vicinity of a weak wave aloft over eastern Indiana but that is not expected to impact the terminals. The warm front will shift north of the terminals after daybreak with skies clearing and S/SW winds becoming gusty by late morning as a tighter pressure gradient develops. May see some flat diurnal cu under a well noted cap for the afternoon. Cu and wind gusts will both diminish towards sunset. && .IND WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...None. && $$ UPDATE...Melo AVIATION...Ryan DISCUSSION...Crosbie |
Previous Forecast Discussions may be found at
NWS Indianapolis, IN (IND) Office Forecast Discussions.
(Click 'Previous Version' there to view past versions successively.
Some may differ only in time posted.)
Products Courtesy of NOAA-NWS
NWS Information Parsing Script by Ken True at Saratoga Weather - WFO and Products Scripts by SE Lincoln Weather.
Mapping by Curly at Michiana Weather and by Tom at My Mishawaka Weather.




