Forecast Discussion for Dallas/Ft. Worth, Texas

092
FXUS64 KFWD 181045
AFDFWD

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Fort Worth TX
545 AM CDT Wed Mar 18 2026

...New AVIATION...

.KEY MESSAGES...

 - Elevated fire weather conditions are expected again today.
   Avoid outdoor burning as grass fires will easily ignite.

 - An early season heatwave will usher in record breaking warmth
   this weekend.

&&

.SHORT TERM...
(Today and tonight)
Issued at 218 AM CDT Wed Mar 18 2026

Today will serve as the on-ramp into a much warmer pattern across
North and Central Texas as southerly return flow persists and
surface high pressure shifts farther east. As stronger westerly
flow rides over the top of the ridge and crosses the Rockies, lee
troughing will deepen across the High Plains and tighten the
gradient enough to support breezy southerly winds by this
afternoon. Even so, moisture return will lag behind the wind
increase. With a dry boundary layer still in place, elevated fire
weather concerns may again emerge in areas along and west of I-35
where afternoon humidity falls into the 20 to 30 percent range.
High should climb into the mid/upper 70s, but even these values
may be a little conservative given the increasingly southwesterly
component in low-level flow. Wednesday night will be much milder
than the past several nights with lows in the upper 40s and low
50s amid continued southerly flow.

&&

.LONG TERM...
(Thursday through Tuesday)
Issued at 218 AM CDT Wed Mar 18 2026

The larger scale pattern through late week and the weekend will
be dominated by an anomalously strong ridge expanding east across
the Southern Plains. The main forecast challenge during the
extended period becomes less about whether it will get hot and
more about how efficiently that warmth aloft will be translated to
the surface. Rising 850-500 mb mean temperatures, subsidence
beneath the ridge, and increasingly deep afternoon mixing will
favor a steady warming trend from Thursday into the weekend. In
other words, the atmosphere will be unusually efficient at turning
anomalous warmth aloft into above normal/record-breaking surface
heat across North and Central Texas. That efficiency may become
maximized particularly across the western half of the forecast
area where a subtle downslope or southwesterly low-level component
can further enhance warming, which is one reason broad blended
and MOS guidance often end up a bit too cool in these regimes.
Highs were nudged a few to several degrees warmer over the next
several days for that reason, and additional upward adjustments
may still be needed if the ridge axis noses a bit farther east or
the downslope signal becomes more pronounced.

By Friday through Sunday, the focus shifts from the general
warming trend to what will be the hottest stretch of the year so
far. While current forecasts remain below formal heat headline
thresholds, this level of heat arriving this early in the season
is particularly concerning as it is following so closely on the
heels of a late season freeze and leaves no time for
acclimatization. Both the NAEFS and ECMWF ESAT continue to
strongly support this abnormal warmth signaling the likelihood
that forecast highs could still trend further upward in later
forecasts, especially west of I-35. Rain chances remain near zero
through the period, and the lack of Gulf recovery and lack of any
meaningful precipitation signal means there is little atmospheric
or fuel moisture offset to the warming trend.

This point also matters from a fire weather perspective. Even if
winds are not particularly strong every day, conditions may become
increasingly supportive of fire spread later this week and into
the weekend as the dry pattern persists, temperatures continue
climbing, and fuels cure further. The latest update from the Texas
A&M Forest Service highlights this same concern, noting that
prolonged unseasonable heat and continued drying can create an
increasingly unfavorable fire environment even on days without a
classic wind-driven setup. That cumulative drying signal may end
up being just as important as any one day`s wind forecast. Looking
beyond the weekend, a front may approach sometime late weekend
into early next week and could eventually interrupt or at least
moderate the heat, but current guidance still offers little
indication of meaningful moisture return or appreciable rain
chances associated with this FROPA.

&&

.AVIATION...
(12Z TAFS)
Issued at 540 AM CDT Wed Mar 18 2026

VFR conditions will persist through the period with only passing
high clouds at all TAF sites. Southerly winds around 8 to 12 kts
this morning will increase to around 15 kts by late morning and
afternoon, resulting in breezy conditions through the day. Winds
will then ease this evening, dropping back to 10 kts or less
around or shortly after sunset and continuing overnight.

&&

.SPOTTER INFORMATION STATEMENT...
Spotter activation is not expected at this time.

&&

.PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS...
Dallas-Ft. Worth    79  53  90  58 /   0   0   0   0
Waco                78  51  86  56 /   0   0   0   0
Paris               73  49  82  54 /   0   0   0   0
Denton              78  48  90  53 /   0   0   0   0
McKinney            75  51  87  56 /   0   0   0   0
Dallas              79  54  89  59 /   0   0   0   0
Terrell             75  50  85  54 /   0   0   0   0
Corsicana           77  52  86  57 /   0   0   0   0
Temple              78  49  87  54 /   0   0   0   0
Mineral Wells       80  48  92  54 /   0   0   0   0

&&

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

$$

SHORT TERM...12
LONG TERM....12
AVIATION...12

NWS FWD Office Area Forecast Discussion