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6:00 AM (Saturday) | ****Several inches of accumulating snow from mid-morning Sunday into Sunday evening...bitter cold to follow with low-to-mid single digits on the table****

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Weather forecasting and analysis, space and historic events, climate information

6:00 AM (Saturday) | ****Several inches of accumulating snow from mid-morning Sunday into Sunday evening...bitter cold to follow with low-to-mid single digits on the table****

Paul Dorian

6-Day forecast for the Washington, D.C. metro region

Today

Mainly cloudy, chilly, a bit of rain, snow, and/or sleet, the rain can freeze on some surfaces early in the day, highs in the lower 40’s; S winds around 5-10 mph

Tonight

Mainly cloudy, cold, maybe some rain and/or snow, lows near 30 degrees

Sunday

Mainly cloudy, breezy, colder, snow or rain changes to snow developing by mid-morning, snow can be heavy at times during the afternoon, low-to-mid 30’s for highs

Sunday Night             

Mainly cloudy with snow winding down during the evening hours, total accumulations of 3-6 inches with isolated higher amounts, very cold, mid-to-upper teens for late night lows

Monday

Brutally cold despite plenty of sunshine, windy, near 20 degrees for highs with much lower wind chill values; single digits for overnight lows

Tuesday

Mainly sunny, breezy, bitter cold, upper teens for highs with much lower wind chill values; single digits for overnight lows

Wednesday

Partly sunny, still frigid cold, chance of snow, mid-to-upper teens for afternoon highs; single digits for overnight lows

Thursday

Mainly sunny, not as harsh, upper 20’s for highs

Discussion

The Arctic front at the leading edge of a widespread brutally cold air mass will slide into the eastern states on Sunday and its progression will slow down across the southeastern states. Energy will rotate through an upper-level trough to a position over the frontal boundary and low pressure will form in this area of convergence. That low pressure system will then push northeastward into an increasingly colder air mass, and it can produce several inches of snow in the DC-to-Philly-to-NYC corridor from tomorrow into tomorrow night.

Total snow accumulations in the DC metro region likely in the 3-6 inch range with isolated higher amounts… a starting time around mid-morning. The higher amounts in this range will be on the northwestern side of the metro region and the lower amounts on the southeastern side. Bitter cold air will follow the accumulating snow for the first half of next week and overnight temperatures will drop way down to the low-to-mid single digits.

Meteorologist Paul Dorian
Arcfield Weather