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
|
| Select Forecast Office: | Select Product: |
364 FXUS63 KIND 180658 AFDIND Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Indianapolis IN 258 AM EDT Mon May 18 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Severe storms possible this afternoon and again Tuesday afternoon and evening with damaging winds, large hail and localized flooding - Highs in the 80s today and Tuesday - Storms will end Wednesday as the front shifts south, but unsettled weather likely returns late this week into the holiday weekend && .DISCUSSION (Today through Sunday)... Issued at 258 AM EDT Mon May 18 2026 An amplified upper level pattern for early this week anchored by a deep trough over the northern Rockies and strong ridging over the eastern part of the country. The ridge will gradually flatten as the trough shifts east enabling a strong cold front to track into the region by late Tuesday. With a warm and unstable airmass ahead of the front...multiple opportunities for thunderstorms will exist through Tuesday night with severe weather possible this afternoon and potentially again Tuesday afternoon and evening as the cold front moves through. High pressure will bring a briefly drier period midweek before unsettled conditions return late week in response to the front lifting back north into the region. Today through Tuesday Night Quiet early morning across central Indiana with clear skies. 06Z temperatures remained warm in the upper 60s and lower 70s in many locations. An active 48 hours is anticipated through Tuesday night with multiple opportunities for rain and thunderstorms and the potential for severe weather in advance of a cold front currently over the Plains and poised to move across the area by Tuesday evening. An ongoing area of convection continues early this morning from the upper Midwest southwest into central Kansas. Much of the line has weakened from Sunday evening with the exception of the southern part of the line over the Missouri Valley where instability and BL shear remain more than sufficient to maintain convective intensity. This portion of the line is likely to remain strong for the remainder of the night with an in creasing flood risk as it sags into south central Missouri and becomes increasingly parallel to the mean flow. The weaker portion of the line over Iowa is of greater interest to the forecast area as its remnants will enable the old outflow boundary to drift into central Illinois by mid to late morning with convection becoming reinvigorated as the outflow interacts with a rapidly destabilizing airmass over the region. Convection will continue to grow upscale as it tracks into the Wabash Valley early this afternoon then presses southeast across the forecast area. Model soundings show steepening mid level lapse rates with SBCAPEs 2000-2500 j/kg and sufficient shear that would support damaging winds...especially if the cold pool can mature. Furthermore...DCAPE values approach 1000 j/kg immediately ahead of the convective line which also lends credence to the damaging wind risk. Abundant CAPE is present within the hail growth zone as well and stronger cells will carry a large hail threat as well. Timing of the greatest risk for severe weather will be between 17Z and 22Z. Storms will weaken as they track towards the Indiana-Ohio border by early evening as it moves away from the deeper instability and stronger low level winds. An axis of PWATs between 1.75 and 2 inches will support torrential rainfall and flooding. The greatest concern will be across the southwest half of the forecast area as training cells become a factor with the line curving back to the west along the instability axis. Showers and embedded storms will continue into the evening but with the airmass worked over from the afternoon convection...the general trend will be towards rain diminishing as weak ridging aloft reestablishes for the overnight. Tuesday has become a bit more uncertain with respect to convective evolution and the potential for another round of severe weather as the model suite has sped up the arrival of the front into the forecast area in the afternoon. More impactful though will be the possibility of convective cloud debris by Tuesday morning from an MCS over the Missouri Valley Monday night. That will stunt diurnal heating and available instability and the earlier arrival of the front during the afternoon presents the possibility that the greater risk for more robust convection will focus across the southeast half of the forecast area and points east late afternoon into the evening. That being said...model soundings do continue to highlight mid level lapse rates up to 7.5C/km with a deep layer of dry adiabatic flow across the region combined with sufficient levels of BL shear to support scattered stronger convection at a minimum with the available instability. Damaging winds will again be the primary risk from these storms with large hail serving as a secondary threat. The cold front will become more parallel to the flow aloft on Tuesday night which will keep showers and thunderstorms across much of the forecast area into Tuesday night...gradually ending from the north overnight as drier air advects into the region. Highs will be tricky both today and Tuesday...dependent on convective timing this afternoon and cloud debris Tuesday. Nudged highs both days down from the model blend with low to mid 80s for much of the forecast area. Wednesday through Sunday Convection may still be ongoing across the southeast half of the forecast area Wednesday morning but will gradually end through the morning as the front shifts south of the region and high pressure builds into the Great Lakes. Confidence continues to grow on the boundary becomes quasi stationary across the Tennessee Valley into Thursday before lifting back north into the Ohio Valley Friday as the high passing to the north moves east into New England. The ensemble guidance has gotten more aggressive in this solution with scattered to numerous showers and storms Friday and Friday night as the front lifts north through the forecast area. Lower confidence remains for the weekend as the return of a warmer and more unstable airmass south of the front will support at least a daily threat for scattered convection but the lack of much agreement in the model ensemble makes employing detail in the timing and coverage of rainfall difficult through much of the holiday weekend. After temperatures mainly in the upper 60s and low 70s Wednesday and Thursday...highs will climb back into the upper 70s and lower 80s Saturday and Sunday. && .AVIATION (06Z TAF Issuance)... Issued at 1252 AM EDT Mon May 18 2026 Impacts: - LLWS lasting through daybreak at KHUF and KLAF - Peak wind gusts at 25 to 30kts today - A line of severe thunderstorms expected during the afternoon with showers continuing into the evening Discussion: Subsidence over the region early this morning leading to mainly clear skies. Surface winds had diminished to 10kts or less courtesy of the nocturnal inversion but strong winds above the inversion within the boundary layer will maintain marginal LLWS focused primarily at KHUF and KLAF through daybreak. A large area of convection extending from the upper Mississippi Valley southwest into the central Plains will track east through the morning likely weakening before restrengthening this afternoon as it interacts with a warm and humid airmass over central Indiana. Expect an intense line of storms likely carrying a threat for damaging winds to move across the terminals during the 17 to 21Z timeframe. Restrictions to IFR and lower will accompany the line. Scattered convection should linger into the evening before gradually diminishing in coverage. Windy conditions will develop quickly after daybreak with peak gusts at 25 to 30kts prior to storms arriving in the afternoon. && .IND WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...None. && $$ AVIATION...Ryan DISCUSSION...Ryan |
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.)
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.




