National Weather Service United States Department of Commerce
Customize Your Weather.gov

LOADING...

Red Flag Warnings/Watches Map | Text Products | Spot Forecast Request | Forecast Discussion | Operating Plan

 

Alaska Area Forecast Discussions


722
FXAK69 PAFG 301410
AFDAFG

Northern Alaska Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Fairbanks AK
510 AM AKST Sun Nov 30 2025

.SYNOPSIS...
Warmer and wetter weather is expected starting today and
continuing through Wednesday across much of Northern Alaska, ahead
of a colder and drier airmass building in later in the week. A
series of systems in the Northern Pacific will work to support
widespread snowfall through midweek, with areas of a wintry mix
and freezing rain possible in the Southern Interior and Lower
Yukon/Upper Kuskokwim Valleys with light ice accumulations
expected. Snowfall overall will remain light initially,
transitioning over to moderate to heavy snow Monday night through
Wednesday from the Yukon Delta northeast through the Interior to
the Central/Eastern Brooks Range. A mix of Winter Weather
Advisories, Winter Storm Warnings, and Special Weather Statements
are in effect for this corridor. An enhanced pressure gradient
along the West Coast and at St. Lawrence Island today through
Wednesday will also lead to gusty N/NE winds. Under the increasing
influence of high pressure starting Thursday, much colder and dry
conditions will return regionwide to finish out the week.

&&

.KEY WEATHER MESSAGES...

Central and Eastern Interior...

- Snow showers will continue to lift north of the Alaska Range
today through Monday, supporting widespread light snowfall
amounts with highest totals in the Alaska Range.

- Warmer and wetter weather builds in Monday night into Tuesday,
as light snow becomes heavier and wetter Tuesday and Wednesday.
Total snow amounts through Wednesday around 3-6" with locally
higher totals around 6-10" north and west of Fairbanks. Lowest
totals around 1-3" remain confined to the Middle/Upper Tanana
Valley.

- As warmer air overruns colder air the surface, a light wintry
mix and freezing rain will be possible across the Southern Interior
reaching as far north as Fairbanks.

- Southerly winds increase through Alaska Range Passes Monday
night into Tuesday, with gusts up to 55 mph possible especially
north of Isabel Pass along the Richardson Highway.

- Increasing high pressure building in Thursday will lead to much
colder and drier conditions to finish out the week.

West Coast and Western Interior...

- Snow showers will continue to lift north across Western Alaska
today and Monday, supporting widespread light snowfall amounts
with driest conditions across the NW Arctic Coast and Southern
Seward Peninsula.

- Warmer and wetter weather builds in Monday night into Tuesday,
as light snow becomes heavier and wetter Tuesday and Wednesday
along a corridor extending northeast from the Yukon Delta into
the Western Interior. Total snow amounts through Wednesday
around 6-10" in this corridor with lighter totals further north
and also south closer to the Alaska Range.

- As warmer air overruns colder air the surface, a wintry mix and
freezing rain will be possible across the Southwest Interior,
Lower Yukon/Upper Kuskokwim Valleys Sunday through Wednesday.
Ice accumulations of 0.05-0.15" expected.

- N/NE winds increase across the West Coast and St. Lawrence
Island today, with gusts up to 55 mph possible through
Wednesday.

- Ocean effect snow showers expected across the northern Seward
Peninsula and St. Lawrence Island, with gusty winds leading to
areas of blowing snow at times.

- Increasing high pressure building in out of the northwest will
lead to colder and drier conditions across the NW Arctic Coast,
expanding further south later in the week.

North Slope and Brooks Range...

- Temperatures begin a cooling trend early this week with areas of
low stratus and scattered snow showers, as a low pressure system
works east through the Arctic Ocean.

- Colder air further north will meet a moist airmass in the
Interior, supporting heaviest snow totals in the Central/Eastern
Brooks Range. Total snow amounts through Wednesday across the
North Slope around 1-3" with locally higher totals in the Brooks
Range around 3-5".

- Breezy winds across the Arctic Coast and in the Brooks Range
could lead to areas of blowing snow at times.

- Increasing high pressure building in out of the northwest
Tuesday into Wednesday will lead to much colder and drier
conditions to finish out the week.

&&

.FORECAST ANALYSIS AND DISCUSSION...Today through Wednesday Night.
Early morning satellite imagery shows a broad area of low
pressure centered over the Central Aleutians in between two ridge
of high pressure in the NE/NW Pacific. This setup will work to
support a multi-day pattern change across Alaska as warmer and
wetter conditions lift north through midweek. The main trough is
tapping into atmospheric river moisture reaching almost down to
20N just north of Hawaii, indicative of the warmer and wetter
airmass this system is tapping into. Overall model agreement
continues to gradually improve with each subsequent run, helping
to increase confidence on impacts expected through midweek.

A front lifting north today into Monday will support widespread
light snow returning to Southwest Alaska and the Interior north to
the Arctic Coast, as drier conditions prevail for the southern
Seward Peninsula and NW Arctic Coast. As warmer air overruns
colder air the surface, areas of a wintry mix and freezing rain
will be possible in the Southern Interior and Lower Yukon/Upper
Kuskokwim Valleys with light ice accumulations expected. A second,
heavier wave of precipitation will fill in behind this front
Monday night through Wednesday as a more organized low rotates
around the broad low pressure in the Aleutians. This system will
tap into more atmospheric river moisture as it rotates around the
main low into Bristol Bay by Tuesday. This second wave is warmer
and wetter than the first, bringing a larger area of wintry mix
further inland as well as moderate to heavy snowfall for much of
the Interior in the deformation zone of this system with an area
of high pressure further northwest. The Northwest Interior and
areas just north of the Alaska Range are likely to remain mostly
dry due to high pressure from the northwest and downsloping winds
near the Alaska Range.

Light snow initially with that first wave will transition over to
moderate to heavy snow Monday night through Wednesday from the
Yukon Delta northeast through the Interior to the Central/Eastern
Brooks Range. A mix of Winter Weather Advisories, Winter Storm
Warnings, and Special Weather Statements are in effect for this
corridor. Storm total snow accumulations through Wednesday in this
area are expected to be 3-6" with locally higher totals in the
central parts of this band around 6-12". Best chances for light
ice accumulations will again be across the Southern Interior and
Lower Yukon/Upper Kuskokwim Valleys, highest further southwest
while up north to around Fairbanks would only stand a chance at
seeing very light amounts. This ice will be mixed with snow and
will be hard to accurately measure. Across the North Slope, a low
working east through the Arctic Ocean will support scattered snow
showers through Tuesday night, with snow accumulations around 1-3"
with locally higher totals in the Brooks Range around 3-5".

With respect to winds, a tightening gradient along the West Coast
starting today between this broad area of low pressure and a
ridge of high pressure over Siberia will lead to gusty N/NE winds
with gusts up to 55 mph possible. Strongest winds in this corridor
as expected from the Bering Straight south to St. Lawrence Island
and the Yukon Delta with strongest winds remaining offshore.
Given these stronger winds, areas of blowing snow will be possible
which could lead to significant reductions in visibility at
times. This would also apply to the Arctic Coast as a low tracks
east through the Arctic Ocean, with patchy blowing snow possible.
Further inland, winds will remain strongest across higher
elevations with a focus in the Brooks Range and through Alaska
Range Passes. Southerly winds increase through will increase
through Alaska Range Passes Monday night into Tuesday, with gusts
up to 55 mph possible especially north of Isabel Pass. As a
result, we are looking at the potential of needing a Wind Advisory
for this area south of Delta Junction.

&&

.EXTENDED FORECAST DAYS 4-7...Thursday through next Sunday.
Ensemble model guidance remains in good agreement late this week
on a much colder and drier airmass building into Northern Alaska
under the increasing influence of high pressure. GFS/ECMWF
ensemble guidance shows 850 mb temperatures reaching down to
around 15-30 below zero across our entire region, supporting
widespread double digit below zero air temperatures with coldest
areas bottoming out around 30-40 below zero. As a result, later
this week is shaping up to bring the coldest temperatures so far
this season for most. Heading into the weekend, long range models
are supporting the potential for a trough to then shift southwest
out of NW Canada towards the Gulf of Alaska. This pattern would
keep best precipitation chances remaining south of our area.

Coastal Hazard Potential Days 3 and 4...None

&&

.AFG WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
AK...Winter Weather Advisory for AKZ824-829-832>835-837>847-849.
Winter Weather Advisory for AKZ848-850.
Winter Storm Warning for AKZ825-826-830-851-852.
PK...Brisk Wind Advisory for PKZ801-802-804-805-852.
Brisk Wind Advisory for PKZ803.
Heavy Freezing Spray Warning for PKZ806-810-816-817-851-853-854-
856.
Gale Warning for PKZ806-807-856.
Small Craft Advisory for PKZ810.
Brisk Wind Advisory for PKZ811-857.
Brisk Wind Advisory for PKZ815.
Gale Warning for PKZ816-817-851-854.
Heavy Freezing Spray Warning for PKZ850-858.
Gale Warning for PKZ850-853.
Brisk Wind Advisory for PKZ861.
&&

$$

MacKay



916
FXAK68 PAFC 301438
AFDAFC

Southcentral and Southwest Alaska Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Anchorage AK
538 AM AKST Sun Nov 30 2025

.SHORT TERM FORECAST SOUTHCENTRAL ALASKA (Days 1 through 3: Today
through Tuesday)...

Relatively warm weather with wintry-ish precipitation continues
across much of Southcentral Alaska. As of 5am, radar shows
precipitation beginning to pick up once again across the Gulf of
Alaska ahead of an advancing front and associated shortwave trough
aloft. Additionally, precipitation lingers across portions of the
Mat-Su Valley where a mix of sleet, snow, freezing rain, and rain
all being observed thus far overnight.

GOES Water Vapor imagery shows a large upper-level low anchored
across the North Pacific, near and just south of the Central
Aleutians / Andreanof Islands. Farther east, water vapor imagery
shows a well-defined baroclinic leaf across the Gulf of Alaska where
a strong upper-level jet interacts with the frontal boundary /
baroclinic zone draped across the Gulf. A surface low will soon
develop beneath this strong upper-level forcing and this deepen
slightly as it advances towards the southern coast of the Kenai
Peninsula.

Model soundings and observational trends continue to highlight the
existing warm nose centered at approximately 925mb on the 12z PAFC
sounding. Southeast flow ahead of the advancing low will help
reinforce this warm layer today atop the existing shallow
subfreezing layer near the surface. As precipitation spreads north
today, a transition zone of mixed precipitation is expected again...
with periods of snow, sleet, and freezing rain all increasingly
likely from Anchorage north into the Mat-Su Valley. Near-surface
temperatures hovering near freezing will likely mean that the
typically-colder pockets across Anchorage and the Big Lake - Houston
- Willow corridor are most likely to see some freezing rain / ice
accretion, while warmer areas in the warm nose (e.g. Hillside) and
portions of the ever-so-windy Matanuska Valley may remain above
freezing.

Precipitation will be at its heaviest across the area this
afternoon and evening hours. With an expected temperature profile
to be very close to the 0C isotherm above the surface, heavy rates
of precipitation may result in just enough cooler to lead to a
period of snow, potentially even heavy/wet at times, while times
of lighter precip may be more rain or drizzle and freezing
drizzle. Flow late overnight on the heels of the precipitation and
in wake of the trough passage will become southerly/up-inlet...
which may allow for a transition back to all rain, or freezing
rain in colder pockets.

With somewhat more clarity is the forecast for the central/eastern
Chugach into the Copper River Basin today. The same system bringing
mixed precip west of the Kenai/Chugach mtns will bring several
inches of snow to much of the basin. 4 to 8 inches of snowfall is
likely for much of the Richardson Highway, with higher amounts in
Thompson Pass and other high-elevation areas. The biggest challenge
with regards to the Copper River Basin forecast is in the Edgerton
Highway / McCarthy Road Corridor where some low-level warm air
intrusion above near-surface cold air may lead to a period of
freezing rain or sleet. Confidence is admittedly low in this area
and we seldom receive ground-truth reports from this area, so if
you`re in Chitina and reading this... feel free to give us a
holler and tell us what`s happening there.

Precipitation diminished overnight tonight. From Monday to Tuesday,
the upper trough will shift east towards the Yukon as another very
transient upper ridge moves across Southcentral in between stronger
storm systems. The next frontal system will quickly move in from the
west during the day on Tuesday as another strong low moves up into
the Bering Sea out west. At this time, it appears likely most
locations near sea level will remain warm enough for mostly rain to
fall with the arrival of this next front, with snow confined to
mainly higher terrain as very warm air continues to spread north.
Stay tuned for updates as we continue to follow this warm and active
pattern into early next week.

-Brown/AS

&&


.SHORT TERM FORECAST SOUTHWEST ALASKA/BERING SEA/ALEUTIANS (Days
1 through 3)...

**Key Message: A Winter Weather Advisory remains in effect for the
Kuskokwim Delta and Kuskokwim Valley from 1AM Sunday to 5AM
Monday less than 1" of snowfall and up to 0.2" of ice
accumulation.**

The first wave of our advertised winter storm is underway across
Southwest Alaska. A complex low pressure system still spins south
of the Aleutian Chain as a front continues to drive precipitation
and warm air advection northward across the region. Surface
observations and radar imagery already shows rain and snow moving
into the Y-K Delta. Aloft, the flow across the Alaska Peninsula
and Southwest Alaska is difluent downstream of a trough that has
dug well southward over the North Pacific, which is aiding the
front in providing synoptic forcing. From the surface to 850 mb,
veering winds are apparent in the sounding profile, with
northeasterly winds at the surface and a southeasterly wind
bringing warmer air aloft. A warm nose below 2000 feet appears in
the sounding above a cold airmass at the surface, circumstances
favoring sleet and freezing rain. Areas under the Winter Weather
Advisory will see a wintry mix of precipitation continue through
the day.

There could be somewhat of a lull in activity Monday morning
through Monday afternoon for the Kuskokwim Valley, though the YK
Delta coast could still continue to lightly precipitate. Areas of
freezing drizzle could linger through this time period as the
upper flow again becomes difluent in nature as another North
Pacific low races northward towards the eastern half of the
Aleutian Chain with a slug of moisture ahead of its front. Late
Monday afternoon is where the second phase of the event starts,
and this one will be far more impactful. There will be
significantly more QPF with this system, and wind profiles at the
surface and aloft will closely resemble the first wave. With a
stronger push with this front, warmer air will be ushered in than
in the first wave, so places along Bristol Bay could very well
warm into the 40s, with just below freezing temperatures holding
on across the Y-K Delta and in Valley locations. One note of
caution is that denser cold air can be stubborn to mix out from
valleys as it tends to pool in low terrain, so freezing rain could
be prolonged for these areas before a changeover to rain. With
cold air not well established, the latent heat release from the
freezing rain will help to further warm surface temperatures
elsewhere. By Tuesday afternoon, significant ice accumulation of
upwards of 0.3" is expected for the Y-K Delta coast, and upwards
of 0.20-0.30" inland across the valleys is expected into the
Sleetmute area.

-AM/ER


&&


.LONG TERM FORECAST (Days 4 through 7 - Wednesday through
Saturday)...

The long term forecast starts with a large low in the Bering over
the Central Aleutians. This low brings a large swath of
precipitation to almost all of the Aleutians, the Pribilof
Islands, and mainland Southwest Alaska. By this point in time,
cooler air will filter into the Southwest mainland, allowing for
freezing rain chances to diminish and for snowfall to be the
predominant precipitation type. However, Bristol Bay will likely
remain as rain or rain/snow for Wednesday. Gale force winds from
the Central Aleutians to Kuskokwim Coast are possible.
Southcentral Alaska will see lingering precipitation as the
remnants of a front linger over the area. Thursday has a higher
amount of uncertainty. In Southwest Alaska, it is likely that the
mainland will see colder air move in as winds become northerly.
This will likely bring in drier air, which would decrease chances
for precipitation. The Bering could see the low weaken as it
remains mostly stationary with light precipitation continuing.
Some guidance has the low dissipating earlier, which would mean
lower precipitation chances. Northwest winds will allow for
elevated wind speeds in the Kuskokwim Delta (15 to 20 mph).
Southcentral may have a break in active weather, with drier and
cooler air moving in.

Friday and Saturday are highly uncertain, but will likely see the
continuation of decreasing temperatures due to an Arctic air mass
dropping into Alaska. As for other features, some kind of a low
may move into the Gulf of Alaska, allowing for higher
precipitation chances and wind speeds, though it is uncertain
exactly where this will set up. Southwest Alaska may see a break
in active weather as a col sets up, allowing for lighter winds and
lower chances for precipitation.

-JAR

&&
.AVIATION...

PANC...VFR conditions will generally prevail through the morning
before deteriorating later today. LLWS will be a concern through
much of the day as strong southeast winds in the 2-3kft layer sit
above northeast winds at the surface. Precipitation is expected to
overspread the Anchorage area once again this afternoon and
continue into the evening before diminishing overnight. With
temperatures in the lower atmosphere expected to hover right near
freezing through the duration of this precip, all precipitation
types are on the table. FZRA to SN is most likely in the
afternoon, with SN becoming more likely if precipitation intensity
increases. Then up-inlet flow and warmer near-sfc temps late
overnight may transition any lingering precip back to rain. CIG
and VIS degradation is expected later today as this precip moves
in, with IFR possible in the evening.

-Brown

&&


$$



770
FXAK67 PAJK 301929
AFDAJK

Southeast Alaska Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Juneau AK
1029 AM AKST Sun Nov 30 2025

.UPDATE...Update to include the 18Z TAF issuance...
Forecast remains generally on track this morning. Snow across the
northern panhandle will slowly transition to a mix of rain/snow
and then over to all rain through the late morning and early
afternoon. Snow could hold on longer for Haines and Skagway into
the afternoon as the warmer southerly winds are slow to arrive.
Accumulating snow expected for the northern highways, especially
the Klondike Highway, as snow will continue. Otherwise, moderate
to heavy rain expected across the region through Sunday night.

&&

SYNOPSIS...

Key Messages:

- Widespread precipitation and strong winds Sunday, with
potential for accumulating snowfall in the northern panhandle.
A winter weather advisory has been issued for the Klondike Highway.

- Another system arrives Tuesday night bringing predominantly rain
and warming temperatures into midweek.

.SHORT TERM.../Through Sunday night/ Incoming front for Sunday is
already spreading precipitation over the northern panhandle from
Kake northward this morning. Rain/snow line stretches from just
north of Angoon to near Pelican and Elfin Cove with Light snow
observed at Hoonah, Gustavus, and Juneau. Snow accumulations have
been light so far with the precip rates being rather light. Precip
rates are expected to increase through the day, but so are
temperatures. Many sea level areas that are currently snowing are
very close to freezing for temperatures right now and how much
snow accumulation various areas receive will depend on how fast
these areas warm and switch ptype to rain through the day. Areas
around Icy Strait and Juneau and even Haines and Skagway will
likely be starting to change to rain later this morning to midday
(Mendenhall Valley and Chilkat Valley may wait until the afternoon
due to cooler temps there) so will likely only see around an inch
or two of snow. The higher elevations of the Klondike Highway
will stay colder longer however so snow will be a ptype through at
least early Monday. There could be a mix with rain even as high
as pass level late Sunday night into early Monday. Snow
accumulations on the Klondike Highway is expected to reach around
4 to 7 inches through late Sunday (winter weather advisory is
still in effect for the upper elevations of the Klondike Highway
through late Sunday night). All other low elevation areas of the
panhandle will be mainly seeing rain today and tonight with
upwards of 0.5 to 1.5 inches of rainfall expected through late
Sunday night.

Winds will be the other factor today with the incoming front.
Winds along the outer coast will start increasing later this
morning and the inner channels will likely start seeing gustier
winds this afternoon. Highest winds will stay offshore, but gusts
to 30 or 35 mph are possible for the southern 2/3rds of the
panhandle and outer coast this afternoon and evening before
diminishing late tonight. Main forecast change was in the northern
gulf where winds were increased to min storm force for midday
today.

.LONG TERM...The upcoming week will start off rather wet as
onshore flow largely continues through Monday night from another
wave of precipitation moving into the panhandle following closely
behind the remnants of the frontal system from Sunday.
Precipitation chances will then begin to diminish across the
panhandle Monday night into Tuesday morning. This secondary wave
of precipitation on Monday will be less substantial than that of
the previous frontal system. The only areas expecting to see any
substantial snow with this will be the upper elevations of the
Klondike Highway. However even there a transition to a slushy mix
and then cold rain is expected by late Monday. Snow levels will
gradually rise through midweek as models continue to suggest a low
level ridge will form over the panhandle along with mid level
ridging over the gulf. This combination will allow for a brief
lull over the panhandle Tuesday, primarily for the southern
panhandle, as the ridging will still support onshore moist flow
into the northern panhandle. Any precipitation for that period
should however remain light due to sinking air aloft.

The next front moving through will begin to impact the NE Gulf Coast
and Yakutat areas into Tuesday night, before moving eastward across
the panhandle. This front will move across the panhandle through
Wednesday, bringing another round of rain and continued warmer
temperatures to the panhandle. Highs for the northern half of the
panhandle will be in the mid to high 40s, while the southern
panhandle will see temperatures around 50 degrees, which is close to
some record temperatures for this time of year if these warmer
temperatures pan out. In terms of precipitation, the majority of the
panhandle will see 850 mb temperatures warming to around 0 degrees
C, and snow levels between 3000 and 6000 ft alongside the warmer
temperatures and wet bulbs at the surface, bringing light to
moderate rain across the area and snow mixing in only at higher
elevations. The only area not expecting rain will be the Klondike
Highway, with snow levels remaining just around 3000 ft allowing for
wetter snow to continue, but with little to no accumulation expected
as of this forecast. Overall the NE Gulf coastline will see between
1 and 2 inches of rain in 24 hours from this system Tuesday night
into Wednesday, and generally less than 1 inch in 24 hours for the
rest of the panhandle.

Looking out into the extended period, a cooling trend is expected as
high pressure builds over the interior and Yukon, driving snow
levels downward gradually from Thursday onwards.

.AVIATION.../through Monday afternoon/...
Widespread moderate to heavy rain precipitation expected through
Sunday night. Snow expected for the northern panhandle sites
Sunday morning before mixing with and changing over to rain by
late morning. Snow could linger a bit longer for PAHN and PAGY
before changing over to rain Sunday afternoon. Generally low-end
MVFR to flight conditions through Sunday night with VIS and CIGs
lowering to IFR under heavier rain and snow. Flight conditions
will improve slightly on Monday afternoon as precip slowly
diminishes, but MVFR flight conditions likely to remain.

Winds increasing this afternoon to 10-15kt gusting 18-25kt. LLWS
Winds will then diminish to generally less than 10kt, starting
first for PAYA Sunday night, then across much of the panhandle
Monday morning. Elevated winds look to linger a bit longer into
Monday afternoon for PAHN and PAGY. LLWS also expected across the
region through Sunday night with winds 2kft aloft 30-45kt.

.MARINE...
Gulf Waters: Incoming front will be spreading SE gale force winds
across the gulf waters this morning. Winds in the northern gulf
near Cape Suckling were increased to min storm force for midday
today, but that was the only major change. The higher winds are
expected to last through the afternoon before switching to the SW
and diminishing this evening. The SW flow is expected to last into
Monday night. Seas are reaching 9 ft this morning as a combination
of wind wave and a 5 ft S swell (period 7 sec). The increased
winds today are expected to build seas across the gulf with a max
near 20 ft near Cape Suckling around midday to afternoon. Seas are
then expected to subside to around 10 to 13 ft by early monday
which will persist into Monday night due in part to a 8 ft SW
swell advancing into the eastern gulf from the SW.

Inside waters: Increasing S and E winds expected for this
afternoon as the front in the gulf comes inland. Highest winds are
expected in the central and southern inner channels topping out
at around 25 to 30 kt this evening before diminishing late Sunday
night. At that point expect wind direction to switch to a more S
and W direction as overall flow becomes more onshore into Monday.
Seas mainly dominated by wind wave up to 6 ft, but areas near
ocean entrances open to the SW will see wave heights up to 8 to
10 ft late tonight into Monday as higher SW swell moves into the
area.

&&

.AJK WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
PUBLIC...Winter Weather Advisory until 3 AM AKST Monday for AKZ318.
MARINE...Storm Warning for PKZ652-672.
Gale Warning for PKZ642>644-651-662>664-671.
Small Craft Advisory for PKZ022-031>036-053-641-661.

&&

$$

SHORT TERM...EAL
LONG TERM...STJ
AVIATION...DS
MARINE...EAL

Visit us at http://www.weather.gov/Juneau