Select NOAA-NWS Forecast Office Text Products

(Product availability varies with seasons, forecast office, and weather.)

Forecast Discussion for Indianapolis, IN

To Select Another NWS Office Click on Map or Choose from List

County Warning Area MAP
Select Forecast Office:   Select Product:  
312
FXUS63 KIND 050701
AFDIND

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Indianapolis IN
301 AM EDT Sun Apr 5 2026

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Drier and cooler weather Sunday through much of the first half of
  the upcoming week. Frost/freeze potential exists Monday and
  Tuesday nights

- Warmer weather returns for the second half of the upcoming week

&&

.SHORT TERM (Today and tonight)...
Issued at 300 AM EDT Sun Apr 5 2026

Much of the short term will be much cooler behind the cold front
that passed through the area yesterday. Temperatures will be below
normal through Tuesday night with highs in the 40s to 50s and
lows in the 30s or below. Wednesday will see a swing back to above
normal temps. A couple of passing surface highs will help keep
conditions dry through at least midweek.

The cooler airmass is being supported by NW flow aloft as well as at
the surface. A large surface high over the central plains will start
to influence conditions for central Indiana later today, starting to
strengthen subsidence and clear out skies this evening into the
overnight. Strong winds aloft will bring continued gusts near 25 mph
for much of the day, but will quickly drop off after sunset.

A stronger surface high will then make its way from central Canada
down through the Great Lakes, pulling in another surge of cooler air
Monday night into Tuesday. Monday night is expected to see mostly
clear skies and northerly winds near 10 mph. The winds prevent the
best conditions of radiational cooling, but still expected lows to
drop below freezing and into the upper 20s for at least the northern
half of the forecast area. Frost or freeze headlines will likely be
needed, so plan to cover any sensitive plants.

Once the surface high drifts NE of the area, surface winds will
shift to out of the south Wednesday, ending the short term with a
return to above normal temperatures, in the upper 60s.

&&

.LONG TERM (Monday through Saturday)...
Issued at 300 AM EDT Sun Apr 5 2026

Expectation for late this week into the weekend remains a return to
above normal temperatures and the beginnings of a return to active
weather.

The strong Canadian high will be moving off the east coast by 00Z
Thursday, with a northern stream low moving eastward along or just
north of the international border. An elongated cold front
stretching from this low back to the central high Plains will stall
somewhere near or just north of the region late week and may produce
multiple opportunities for convection, though model disagreement
precludes much more than low chance PoPs until very late in the
period.

There is little to indicate significant severe threats during the
latter portion of the forecast, and this is backed up by
experimental machine learning guidance. That said, week two outlooks
continue to indicate enhanced likelihood of warmer than normal and
above normal precipitation conditions, thus we may well be back in
an active pattern for mid to late April.

&&

.AVIATION (06Z TAF Issuance)...
Issued at 215 AM EDT Sun Apr 5 2026

Impacts:

- Gusty NW winds up to around 20 kt possible much of the period
- MVFR stratus returns Sunday morning

Discussion:

Behind the cold front, W to NW winds are gusting to 25 kt at the
start of the period but should decrease to 20 kt within the first
few hours of the TAF period. Gusts are expected to last into the
afternoon. Low VFR ceilings tonight but will drop to MVFR during the
13-17z timeframe before lifting back to VFR.


&&

.IND WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
None.
&&

$$

SHORT TERM...KF
LONG TERM...Nield
AVIATION...KF

Previous Forecast Discussions may be found at
NWS Indianapolis, IN (IND) Office Forecast Discussions.
(Click 'Previous Version' there to view past versions successively.
Some may differ only in time posted.)

San Juan, PRHonolulu, HI Lake Charles, LA Pueblo, CO Corpus Christi, TX St. Louis, MO Reno, NV Raleigh, NC  Newport/Morehead City, NC Dodge City, KS Houston/Galveston, TX San Joaquin Valley/Hanford, CA Louisville, KY Fort Worth, TX Pittsburgh, PA Austin/San Antonio, TX Sacramento, CA Jackson, MS Phoenix, AZ Northern Indiana, IN Flagstaff, AZ Tallahassee, FL Springfield, MO Riverton, WY Blacksburg, VA Sioux Falls, SD El Paso Area, NM Columbia, SC Wilmington, NC Greenville-Spartanburg, SC Eureka, CA Midland/Odessa, TX Tucson, AZ Goodland, KS Huntsville, AL Amarillo, TX Norman, OK Lubbock, TX Marquette, MI Little Rock, AR Pendleton, OR Missoula, MT Binghamton, NY Boston, MA Green Bay, WI Billings, MT Baltimore/Washington San Diego, CA Tampa Bay, FL Morristown, TN Twin Cities, MN Brownsville, TX Portland, OR Des Moines, IA Memphis, TN Pocatello, ID San Angelo, TX Jacksonville, FL Aberdeen, SD Quad Cities, IA/IL Charleston, SC New Orleans/Baton Rouge, LA Peachtree City, GA Shreveport, LA Grand Rapids, MI Medford, OR Albany, NY Wichita, KS Gray/Portland, ME Spokane, WA Boise, ID Denver/Boulder, CO Great Falls, MT Caribou, ME Key West, FL Miami-South Florida, FL New York City/Upton, NY Melbourne, FL Hastings, NE Paducah, KY Glasgow, MT Bismarck, ND Charleston WV Omaha/Valley, NE Buffalo, NY Jackson, KY Kansas City/Pleasant Hill, MO Gaylord, MI Cheyenne, WY Grand Forks, ND Detroit/Pontiac, MI Central Illinois, IL Burlington, VT Salt Lake City, UT Topeka, KS Nashville, TN Milwaukee/Sullivan, WI Albuquerque, NM Las Vegas, NV Wakefield, VA La Crosse, WI Birmingham, AL Los Angeles/Oxnard, CA Chicago, IL Seattle, WA Rapid City, SD Indianapolis, IN Philadelphia/Mount Holly, PA Mobile/Pensacola State College, PA Cleveland, OH Elko, NV Wilmington, OH Grand Junction, CO North Platte, NE Tulsa, OK San Francisco/Monterey Bay Area, CA Duluth, MN Anchorage, AK Fairbanks, AK Juneau, AK Tiyan, GU

Products Courtesy of NOAA-NWS
NWS Information Parsing Script by Ken True at Saratoga Weather - WFO and Products Scripts by SE Lincoln Weather.
Mapping by Curly at Michiana Weather and by Tom at My Mishawaka Weather.