Rain chances (20%) will enter the forecast late Saturday and continue into Sunday, Jan. 26. Sunday holds a 40% chance of showers and storms, with the greatest chances for rain coming across Central and Southeast Texas, according to the NWS. Additional rain chances are in the forecast for next week.
Much of the Metroplex is under a cold weather advisory until 9 a.m. Wednesday, according to the National Weather Service Fort Worth. Daily temperatures will be in the 30s, with overnight lows in the 20s on Tuesday, Jan. 21.
North Texas' extreme cold snap had the region under a weather advisory for much of the long weekend, but relief is on the way. Tuesday morning’s wind chill was projected to be in the low teens, according to the National Weather Service’s Fort Worth office,
First Alert Weather Days remain in effect through Wednesday morning due to "feels-like" temperatures in the single digits.
A Cold Weather Advisory continues through Wednesday morning across North Texas. The National Weather Service says low temperatures could reach into the low 20s Tuesday night.
The National Weather Service issued a cold weather advisory for North and Central Texas, with wind chills as low as 5 degrees.
Below-freezing temperatures are expected to arrive Saturday night in North Texas as the region is blasted with arctic cold air.
The winter storm warning in effect for North Texas has been downgraded to a winter weather advisory, according to the National Weather Service Fort Worth. Temperatures in the Fort Worth area remain around freezing, and the precipitation could cause a small amount of additional ice to accumulate bridges and overpasses.
Road conditions are expected to improve in the afternoon before Friday's Cotton Bowl. Here are the latest weather updates from Dallas-Fort Worth:
National Weather Service locations across Texas have forecast totals from a half-inch to five inches of snow between Monday and Tuesday.
After a cold start to Thursday morning, Dallas will warm up, but rain and storm chances are ahead in the weekend weather forecast.
The rare Southern storm prompted this headline from the Anchorage Daily News: "Hey, New Orleans, please send some of your snow to Anchorage."