554  
FXUS63 KFSD 180548  
AFDFSD  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SIOUX FALLS SD  
1248 AM CDT MON MAY 18 2026  
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
- THE SEVERE THREAT FOR TONIGHT HAS ENDED.  
 
- A LOWER RISK OF SEVERE WEATHER EXISTS LATE MONDAY AFTERNOON  
AND EVENING, MAINLY OVER NORTHWEST IA, BEFORE QUIETER WEATHER  
MOVES IN FOR THE MID-WEEK PERIOD.  
 
- DRY FOR THE MIDDLE PORTIONS OF THE WEEK. THEN ANOTHER ROUND  
OF STORMS IS POSSIBLE THURSDAY INTO FRIDAY.  
 

 
   
UPDATE
 
 
ISSUED AT 1059 PM CDT SUN MAY 17 2026  
 
THE THREAT FOR SEVERE WEATHER HAS ENDED FOR TONIGHT FOR THE FORECAST  
REGION. A FEW LINGERING SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS WILL CONTINUE FOR  
A FEW MORE HOURS, ENDING IN THE VERY EARLY HOURS OF MONDAY  
MORNING. GUSTY NORTHWEST WINDS WILL EXPAND EASTWARD OVERNIGHT,  
GUSTING 25-30 MPH, WITH A FEW GUSTS TO 35 MPH OVER SOUTH CENTRAL  
SOUTH DAKOTA. WINDS CONTINUE TO PUSH EAST THROUGH THE DAY  
MONDAY AND REMAIN BREEZY INTO TUESDAY.  
 
BY MONDAY AFTERNOON CHANCES INCREASE FOR SCATTERED SHOWERS AND  
THUNDERSTORMS. SOME STORMS MAY BECOME STRONG TO SEVERE,  
ESPECIALLY FOR PORTIONS OF NORTHEAST NEBRASKA AND NORTHWEST  
IOWA. SOME UNCERTAINTY REMAINS AFTER TODAY'S STORMS AS TO HOW  
WELL THE ATMOSPHERE WILL RECOVER BY TOMORROW AFTERNOON. IF YOU  
HAVE OUTDOOR PLANS, PLEASE CHECK THE FORECAST FOR UPDATES AND  
HAVE MULTIPLE WAYS TO RECEIVE WARNINGS.  
 

 
   
DISCUSSION
 
 
ISSUED AT 120 PM CDT SUN MAY 17 2026  
 
THE SHORT-TERM CONVECTIVE OUTLOOK PRESENTS A HIGHLY VOLATILE  
SPRING SEVERE WEATHER SETUP. LATEST SURFACE ANALYSIS SHOWS A  
COMPLEX PATTERN, ANCHORED BY A STRONG 994 MB LOW OVER NORTHWEST  
KS. AN INVERTED TROUGH EXTENDED NORTH OF THE LOW THROUGH  
CENTRAL SD, WHILE A WELL-DEFINED WARM FRONT STRETCHED NORTHEAST  
OF THE LOW INTO EAST CENTRAL NE. A WEAKER LOW WAS ALSO NOTED IN  
NORTH CENTRAL NE. VISIBLE SATELLITE IMAGERY REVEALED STABLE  
WAVE CLOUDS ADVANCING NORTHEAST OVER FAR NORTHEAST NE AND  
EXTREME SE SD, AHEAD OF THE ADVANCING WARM FRONT. REGIONAL  
RADAR IMAGERY SHOWED A COMPLEX OF STRONG TO SEVERE STORMS OVER  
NORTH CENTRAL NE. THIS STORM COMPLEX IS FORECAST BY SHORT RANGE  
GUIDANCE TO CONTINUE TRACKING EAST THIS AFTERNOON, INTENSIFYING  
AS INTERACTS WITH THE RICHER LOW- LEVEL MOISTURE POOL NEAR AND  
SOUTH OF THE WARM FRONT.  
 
MODERATE TO STRONG INSTABILITY WILL BE IN PLACE OVER THE  
SOUTHERN TO EASTERN CWA BY LATE AFTERNOON WITH MLCAPE NEARING  
3000 J/KG. IN ADDITION, DEEP LAYER SHEAR WILL INCREASE TO AROUND  
50 KT, COINCIDENT WITH A MID LEVEL SPEED MAX EJECTING FROM THE  
DEEP UPPER TROUGH TO OUR WEST. AS THE SYSTEM EVOLVES OVER THE  
NEXT SEVERAL HOURS, IT APPEARS THE INGREDIENTS FOR A SIGNIFICANT  
SEVERE WEATHER EVENT WILL BE MOST FAVORED OVER THE SOUTHERN TO  
EASTERN CWA. AHEAD OF THE MAIN CONVECTIVE LINE, SOME CAMS SHOW  
SUPERCELL DEVELOPMENT ALONG THE NORTHWARD ADVANCING WARM FRONT.  
THESE STORMS WOULD PRESENT A RISK OF VERY LARGE HAIL (2"+) AND  
TORNADOES. GIVEN THE AMOUNT OF LOW LEVEL SRH/CURVED HODOGRAPHS  
PRESENT, A COUPLE STRONG TORNADOES ARE POSSIBLE. THE CONVECTIVE  
CLUSTER CURRENTLY ENTERING OUR FAR SOUTHWEST CWA SHOULD  
STRENGTHEN AS IT SHIFTS EAST, WITH AN INITIAL HAIL AND TORNADO  
THREAT TRANSITIONING TO A DAMAGING STRAIGHT LINE WIND THREAT  
(70+ MPH) AS IT GROWS UPSCALE INTO A SQUALL LINE/QLCS. SOME  
LINE-EMBEDDED QLCS TORNADOES ARE POSSIBLE, ESPECIALLY FOR ANY  
LINE SEGMENTS THAT BECOME ORIENTED NORTH/SOUTH OR  
NORTHWEST/SOUTHEAST, GIVEN SOUTHWESTERLY 0-3 KM SHEAR VECTORS.  
TIMING FROM LATEST HIGH-RES GUIDANCE SUGGESTS THIS ACTIVITY  
EXITS TO THE EAST OF OUR CWA LATE THIS EVENING.  
 
PRECIPITATION AMOUNTS WILL VARY SIGNIFICANTLY BASED ON CONVECTIVE  
TRACKS, THOUGH NBM GUIDANCE AND HREF PROBABILITY MATCH MEAN  
FIELDS PROJECT A WIDESPREAD 0.50 TO 1.50 INCHES OF RAINFALL,  
PARTICULARLY ACROSS NORTHWEST IOWA AND SOUTHWEST MINNESOTA. ON  
MONDAY, THE COLD FRONT FINALLY PUSHES INTO THE AREA. INSTABILITY  
AND SHEAR ARE FORECAST TO BE MUCH LOWER THAN TODAY, HOWEVER,  
THERE WILL BE A CONDITIONAL RISK OF SEVERE STORMS OVER THE  
EASTERN CWA DURING THE LATE AFTERNOON TO EVENING, IF THE AIRMASS  
CAN DESTABILIZE SUFFICIENTLY AHEAD OF THE FRONT. SPC'S DAY 2  
OUTLOOK INDICATES AS MARGINAL RISK (LEVEL 1 OF 5), FOR OUR MN  
AND IA COUNTIES.  
 
BEHIND THE DEPARTING UPPER WAVE, QUASI-ZONAL FLOW SETS UP FOR  
TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY, YIELDING QUIET CONDITIONS AND SEASONALLY  
COOL HIGH TEMPERATURES MODERATING FROM THE UPPER 50S TUESDAY TO  
MID-UPPER 60S WEDNESDAY.  
 
THE NEXT UPPER WAVE MOVES IN FOR THE THURSDAY TO FRIDAY PERIOD,  
HOWEVER GULF MOISTURE REMAINS CUTOFF AHEAD OF THIS SYSTEM.  
EVALUATING THE ECMWF EXTREME FORECAST INDEX (EFI) REVEALS NO  
SIGNIFICANT CLIMATOLOGICAL ANOMALIES FOR PRECIPITATION OR WIND  
ACROSS THE UPPER MIDWEST DURING THIS PERIOD, REINFORCING THE  
THE IDEA OF A LOW-IMPACT SYSTEM FOR OUR AREA. THE CURRENT  
FORECAST STICKS CLOSELY TO THE NBM CONSENSUS, MAINTAINING BROAD  
20-30 PERCENT PROBABILITIES FOR LIGHT RAIN FOR LATE THURSDAY  
INTO SATURDAY.  
 
BY LATE THIS WEEK AND ESPECIALLY THIS WEEKEND, TEMPERATURES  
WILL EMBARK ON A STEADY UPWARD TRAJECTORY, AS THE MID LEVEL FLOW  
BACKS WEST, THEN SOUTHWEST. THE CLIMATE PREDICTION CENTER (CPC)  
6-10 DAY OUTLOOK FAVORS ABOVE-NORMAL TEMPERATURES ACROSS THE  
NORTHERN PLAINS AND UPPER MIDWEST, WHICH SUPPORTS BLENDED  
GUIDANCE HIGH TEMPERATURES REACHING WELL INTO THE 80S ON  
SUNDAY.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z TUESDAY/
 
 
ISSUED AT 1247 AM CDT MON MAY 18 2026  
 
A MIX OF VFR DOWN TO LIFR ACROSS THE REGION AS LOW STRATUS PERSISTS  
THROUGH MOST OF THE PERIOD. BREEZY NORTHWEST WINDS GUSTING 20-25 KTS  
WEST OF I-29 WILL ALSO PREVAIL FOR THE PERIOD. TO THE EAST GUSTS ARE  
WEST BECOMING NORTHWEST AT 10-15 KTS. MONDAY MORNING WINDS BECOME  
NORTHERLY AND INCREASE THROUGH THE AFTERNOON AND INTO THE EVENING.  
PEAK GUSTS OF 25-35 KTS ARE EXPECTED, WITH THE STRONGEST WINDS OVER  
SOUTH CENTRAL SOUTH DAKOTA. THE STRONGER WINDS GRADUALLY PROGRESS TO  
THE EAST TOWARD THE END OF THE PERIOD.  
 
DRY CONDITIONS ARE EXPECTED UNTIL MONDAY AFTERNOON. CHANCES FOR  
SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS INCREASE THROUGH THE AFTERNOON AND INTO  
THE EVENING. SHOWERS WILL BE SCATTERED IN NATURE AND WILL BE MORE  
PERIODIC THAN CONTINUOUS. AS WE APPROACH THE LATE AFTERNOON AND  
EARLY EVENING, SEVERE RISKS INCREASE ESPECIALLY FOR AREAS OF  
NORTHEAST NEBRASKA AND NORTHWEST IOWA. THERE IS SOME QUESTION ON HOW  
WELL THE ATMOSPHERE WILL RECOVER BEFORE MONDAY AFTERNOON. THIS MAY  
LIMIT SEVERE POTENTIAL TO JUST A FEW STORMS. STRONGER STORMS THAT DO  
FORM MAY BE CAPABLE OF PRODUCING LARGE HAIL AND DAMAGING WIND GUSTS.  
SHOWERS AND STORMS CONTINUE THROUGH THE END OF THE PERIOD.  
 

 
   
FSD WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
SD...NONE.  
MN...NONE.  
IA...NONE.  
NE...NONE.  
 

 
 

 
 
UPDATE...AJP  
DISCUSSION...DUX  
AVIATION...AJP  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab SD Page
The Nexlab IA Page
The Nexlab MN Page
The Nexlab NE Page Main Text Page