Forecast Discussion for Dallas/Ft. Worth, Texas

081
FXUS64 KFWD 301109
AFDFWD

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Fort Worth TX
609 AM CDT Thu Apr 30 2026

...New AVIATION...

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Isolated showers and a few storms will continue through the
  overnight mainly south of I-20.

- Scattered showers and a few storms will increase in coverage
  through the day Thursday into Thursday night. Widespread
  rainfall is expected across all of North and Central Texas on
  Friday. Rainfall amounts of 1 to 3 inches can be expected.

- Dry and seasonably cooler weather is forecast over the weekend.

&&

.SHORT TERM...
(Tonight through Friday)
Issued at 1239 AM CDT Thu Apr 30 2026

Scattered showers and a few thunderstorms continue mainly across
our far eastern counties at this hour. This activity will likely
continue to move east with a brief lull in activity expected
through the remainder of the night. Any additional activity that
should develop will likely be south of I-20.

Water vapor and satellite imagery show extensive cloud cover atop
the post frontal airmass while moisture continues to stream in
from the west. At the surface, our frontal boundary is well into
South Texas at this hour and a cooler north wind prevails across
North Texas. The mid levels feature low amplitude troughing over
the Central and Southern Plains with a nearly zonal westerly flow
aloft and 100 kt subtropical upper jet extending from the Desert
Southwest into the mid Mississippi Valley. A stronger compact
shortwave is approaching northern Baja California and will be
responsible for widespread rainfall across the region on Friday.
Until then, the forecast will continue to feature intermittent
showers and thunderstorms aided by weak ascent from smaller
perturbations in the mid level flow. As is common in these types
of setups, timing these individual disturbances can be a challenge
and we`ll rely on the overall consensus of the model guidance to
help pick out when stronger ascent appears to be approaching
upstream. For the rest of the overnight hours, any additional
development will likely be tied to weak warm advection and
additional rain chances are around 20%.

Headed into early Thursday morning, height falls will overspread
the Southern Plains tied to a shortwave trough moving out of the
Intermountain West and becoming sheared apart in the Central
Plains. As it does, flow above the surface will veer a bit in
response and broad area of low/mid level warm moist advection will
develop prior to sunrise across the Big Country and into North
Texas. Forecast 850-700 mb theta-e advection is being used as a
proxy for the area of best ascent and this should initially be
across our western counties during the early morning hours, then
overspread the I-35 corridor by mid/late morning. This should
result in widespread showers and few thunderstorms developing and
traversing the area through the day. We`ll have relatively high
PoPs in the 40-60% range to account for this activity then we
should see a gradual decrease in coverage as the better forcing
moves to the east. Unlike Wednesday, MUCAPE values will be
considerably lower and the threat for large hail will also be
lower. That being said, mid level lapse rates will still be
sufficiently steep for a few instances of hail in the stronger
cores.

With a lull in activity expected Thursday afternoon/evening into
the overnight hours, our upstream shortwave over Baja will begin
to move northeast and will become the primary source of large
scale forcing for ascent late Thursday night into Friday.
Widespread showers and a few thunderstorms will increase in
coverage across Central Texas and gradually spread north into
North Texas during the day Friday. Friday looks to be an all day
rain event for much of the region, although there will likely be a
fairly sharp gradient in QPF from south to north with the I-20
corridor being an approximate dividing line from heavier rainfall
to the south and lighter amounts to the north. Rainfall amounts
should total 1 to 3 inches in areas south of I-20, while areas to
the north and closer to the Red River should pick up between 1/2
and 1 inch of rain. Higher end amounts across our far southern
counties should top out around 4 inches. Convective potential
looks considerably lower during this time so this will be
primarily a rain event during the day on Friday, but given the
amount of forcing, we can`t rule out some cores capable of
producing lightning through the day. All of this activity will
come to an end from west to east Friday evening.

Given the extensive cloud cover, north winds, and widespread
rainfall, temperatures will be well below normal with highs in the
mid/upper 60s on Thursday and in the upper 50s and lower 60s on
Friday.

Dunn

&&

.LONG TERM...
(Friday night through next Wednesday)
Issued at 1239 AM CDT Thu Apr 30 2026

Precipitation should be tapering off across the region from west
to east late Friday night. A fantastic weekend is expected with
sunny skies, high temperatures in the 70s and overnight lows in
the upper 40s and lower 50s. Southerly flow will return early next
week as our surface high moves off to the east and temperatures
will rebound accordingly into the low/mid 80s. Low storm chances
will return late Tuesday night into Wednesday with a fast moving
system in the Plains and another late week front will bring temps
back down into the 70s by Thursday. Overall the extended forecast
looks quite nice.

Dunn

&&

.AVIATION...
(12Z TAFS)
Issued at 604 AM CDT Thu Apr 30 2026

No major changes to the 12Z TAF package other than to remove TS
from the prevailing precip type later this morning. Large scale
lift is spreading into the region based on recent radar/satellite
trends and we should see precip expand in coverage through the
morning. Initial activity will likely have lightning in it but
MUCAPE will wane through the late morning and early afternoon with
showers generally prevailing (or at least that`s the thinking)
into early afternoon. Over the last hour, low clouds have
scattered a bit, but think this is temporary. We`ll start off with
SCT022 but carry a TEMPO for BKN conditions through 14Z, then low
clouds should fill back in. Precip should overspread parts of
North Texas by 14-15Z with a TEMPO for -SHRA from 17-21Z which
represents the best timing for impacts to the D10 airspace. This
initial wave of precip should move east this evening with a lull
in activity and an improvement in cigs. MVFR cigs will return
later tonight with the larger precip shield overspreading the
region early Friday morning.

Dunn

&&

.SPOTTER INFORMATION STATEMENT...
Issued at 1239 AM CDT Thu Apr 30 2026

Spotter activation is not expected at this time.

&&

.PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS...
Dallas-Ft. Worth    66  55  58  50 /  50  50  70  30
Waco                69  55  59  50 /  60  80  90  30
Paris               66  53  62  48 /  40  20  50  30
Denton              66  52  59  47 /  50  50  70  30
McKinney            66  54  59  49 /  50  40  60  30
Dallas              68  55  58  51 /  50  50  70  30
Terrell             67  54  58  49 /  50  50  70  40
Corsicana           71  56  58  51 /  60  70  90  40
Temple              72  57  58  50 /  60  90 100  30
Mineral Wells       66  51  56  46 /  60  60  80  30

&&

.FWD WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
None.

&&

$$

NWS FWD Office Area Forecast Discussion