164  
FXUS65 KTFX 170559  
AFDTFX  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE GREAT FALLS MT  
1159 PM MDT SAT MAY 16 2026  
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
- LIGHT MOUNTAIN SNOW AND LOWER ELEVATION RAIN WILL CONTINUE  
THROUGH THE DAY.  
 
- COOLER TEMPERATURES WILL PERSIST THROUGH TUESDAY MORNING BEFORE  
MORE SEASONAL TEMPERATURES RETURN MID-WEEK.  
 
- ANOTHER SYSTEM ARRIVES ON WEDNESDAY BRINGING ANOTHER ROUND OF  
LIGHT MOUNTAIN SNOW AND LOWER ELEVATION RAIN AS WELL AS A  
CHANCE FOR AFTERNOON THUNDERSTORMS.  
 

 
   
DISCUSSION
 
 
- METEOROLOGICAL OVERVIEW:  
 
AN UPPER LEVEL TROUGH WILL CONTINUE ITS WAY ACROSS THE REGION  
BRINGING A CHANCE FOR LIGHT MOUNTAIN SNOW AND LOWER ELEVATION RAIN  
THROUGHOUT THE DAY. AS THE TROUGH STARTS TO DEPART, NORTHERLY FLOW  
BEHIND IT WILL KEEP TEMPERATURES WELL BELOW NORMAL THROUGH  
MONDAY. MORE ZONAL FLOW RETURNS ON TUESDAY, ALLOWING FOR SEASONAL  
TEMPERATURES TO RETURN. JUST AS TEMPERATURES START TO GRADUALLY  
WARM UP, A SHORTWAVE TROUGH IS EXPECTED TO MOVE INTO THE REGION ON  
WEDNESDAY BRINGING ANOTHER CHANCE FOR SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS.  
MOUNTAIN SNOW WILL GENERALLY STAY ABOVE PASS LEVEL FOR THIS STORM  
WITH ONLY SLIGHT PROBABILITIES OF SNOW LEVELS DROPPING LOW ENOUGH  
TO PROVIDE IMPACTS AT PASS LEVEL.  
 
TOWARDS THE END OF THE WEEK CLUSTER GUIDANCE POINTS TOWARDS UPPER-  
LEVEL RIDGING BUILDING ALONG THE WEST COAST BRINGING A RETURN TO  
NORTHWESTERLY FLOW OVER MONTANA. THE RESULT WILL BE MORE SEASONAL TO  
ABOVE-NORMAL TEMPERATURES WITH GENERALLY DRY CONDITIONS PERSISTING  
ACROSS THE REGION.  
 
- FORECAST CONFIDENCE & SCENARIOS:  
 
SUNDAY SNOW:  
 
OVERALL, SNOWFALL AMOUNTS HAVE DECREASED COMPARED TO PREVIOUS MODEL  
RUNS WITH THE MOUNTAINS AND VALLEYS OF SOUTHWEST MONTANA EXPECTED TO  
SEE AN ADDITIONAL 1 TO 3 INCHES WITH ISOLATED HIGHER AMOUNTS  
POSSIBLE ALONG THE PEAKS. FOR THE NORTHERN ROCKY MOUNTAINS AND THE  
LITTLE BELTS, 2 TO 4 INCHES ARE POSSIBLE AT PASS LEVEL WITH HIGHER  
AMOUNTS EXPECTED ALONG THE PEAKS. BUT GENERALLY, THE MODELS HAVE  
MOVED AWAY FROM THE PREVIOUSLY FORECASTED 6 TO 12 INCHES ALONG THE  
PEAKS. THIS IS NOT TO SAY IT IS COMPLETELY OUT OF THE RANGE OF  
POSSIBILITIES. BUT THE PROBABILITY OF OCCURRENCE NOW SITS AT AROUND  
10-20%.  
 
WHILE THERE IS STILL SOME POTENTIAL FOR ENHANCED SNOWFALL ALONG  
NORTH-FACING SLOPES, THE MODELS HAVE BACKED OFF SIGNIFICANTLY  
COMPARED TO PREVIOUS RUNS. IN PARTICULAR, THE PROBABILITIES FOR  
SNOWFALL AMOUNTS GREATER THAN 6 INCHES HAVE DECREASED SIGNIFICANTLY  
ACROSS THE REGION. THAT BEING SAID, THERE IS STILL ENOUGH SNOWFALL  
EXPECTED TO PRODUCE IMPACTS THAT ARE WORTHY OF THE CURRENT SUITE OF  
WINTER WEATHER ADVISORIES. SO NO CHANGES ADDITIONS OR SUBTRACTIONS  
WERE MADE TO THE ADVISORIES WITH THIS FORECAST PACKAGE.  
 
WEDNESDAY PRECIPITATION:  
 
GIVEN THAT THIS SHORTWAVE TROUGH IS NOT EXPECTED TO BE AS COLD AS  
THE CURRENT SYSTEM MOVING THROUGH, LIGHT SNOW WILL BE PRIMARILY  
CONFINED TO THE HIGHER PEAKS OF THE MOUNTAINS. LOCATIONS AT AND  
BELOW PASS LEVEL MAY PICK UP A FEW FLAKES BUT NOTHING LOOKS  
PARTICULARLY IMPACTFUL AT THIS TIME. LOWER ELEVATIONS WILL SEE A  
CHANCE FOR RAIN THROUGHOUT THE DAY WITH A CHANCE FOR THUNDERSTORMS  
IN THE AFTERNOON/EVENING HOURS. CURRENTLY, THE EURO FOCUSES MORE OF  
THE INSTABILITY IN CENTRAL MONTANA WHEREAS THE GFS PUSHES IT TOWARDS  
SOUTHWEST MONTANA AND THE EASTERN HI-LINE. SO THE GENERALIZED 15-20%  
CHANCE FOR A THUNDERSTORM ACROSS A LARGE PORTION OF THE REGION  
MATCHES THE CURRENT CONFIDENCE OF SUGGESTING THERE COULD BE  
SOMETHING BUT THERE IS STILL A BIT OF UNCERTAINTY AS TO WHERE IT  
WILL HAPPEN. -THOR  
 

 
   
AVIATION
 
 
17/06Z TAF PERIOD  
 
A LARGE UPPER LEVEL DISTURBANCE MOVING OVER THE WESTERN US WILL  
CONTINUE TO SPREAD LOW TO MID-LEVEL CLOUD COVER ACROSS THE  
NORTHERN ROCKIES THROUGH THE 1706/1806 TAF PERIOD, WITH THE LOWEST  
CIGS EXPECTED TO SHIFT FROM SOUTHWEST MONTANA TO OVER THE VALLEYS  
AND PLAINS OF CENTRAL AND NORTH CENTRAL MONTANA THROUGH 09-15Z  
SUNDAY. PRECIPITATION COVERAGE AND INTENSITY WILL BEGIN TO SHIFT  
NORTHWARD OVER THIS SAME TIMEFRAME AS A COLD FRONT DROPS SOUTH  
FROM CANADA AND ACROSS THE NORTHERN ROCKIES, WITH THE MOST  
PERSISTENT PRECIPITATION OCCURRING IN EASTERLY AND NORTHERLY  
UPSLOPE AREAS OF CENTRAL AND NORTH CENTRAL MONTANA. WHILE  
MVFR/LOW-VFR WILL GENERALLY DOMINATE OVER THE NEXT 24 HOURS THERE  
WILL BE TIMES OF LIFR/IFR CONDITIONS, MOST NOTABLY AT THE KCTB,  
KGTF, AND KLWT TERMINALS. - MOLDAN  
 

 
   
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS
 
 
GTF 51 31 40 27 / 40 30 80 40  
CTB 54 30 38 25 / 10 50 70 10  
HLN 48 32 43 30 / 70 30 70 30  
BZN 58 28 45 28 / 80 90 30 30  
WYS 51 23 37 21 / 20 50 20 20  
DLN 57 25 45 23 / 20 40 40 20  
HVR 57 35 44 29 / 30 50 80 50  
LWT 55 30 39 27 / 80 90 70 60  
 

 
   
TFX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY UNTIL MIDNIGHT MDT SUNDAY NIGHT FOR BIG  
BELT, BRIDGER AND CASTLE MOUNTAINS-EAST GLACIER PARK REGION-  
ELKHORN AND BOULDER MOUNTAINS-LITTLE BELT AND HIGHWOOD MOUNTAINS-  
SOUTHERN ROCKY MOUNTAIN FRONT-UPPER BLACKFOOT AND MACDONALD PASS.  
 
WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY UNTIL 6 AM MDT SUNDAY FOR GALLATIN  
VALLEY-GALLATIN AND MADISON COUNTY MOUNTAINS AND CENTENNIAL  
MOUNTAINS-MADISON RIVER VALLEY.  
 

 
 

 
HTTP://WWW.WEATHER.GOV/GREATFALLS  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab MT Page Main Text Page