North Texas, National Weather Service
A widespread 2 to 3 inches of rain is possible overnight, which is why our First Alert Weather Team will be monitoring the event and covering it on our 24/7 stream. However, it's looking more likely that some isolated higher rainfall amounts will be possible - potentially as much as 7 inches of rain.
Fort Worth. After a relatively dry weekend, North Texas is in store for severe thunderstorms and possible hail this week. Conditions will be calm on Monday, Jan. 27, and Tuesday,
North Texas is likely to see a three-day stretch of bone-chilling cold starting Sunday, according to the National Weather Service.
Cold air will be in place through the middle of the week, according to the National Weather Service Fort Worth. Here is what to expect.
The National Weather Service issued a cold weather advisory for North and Central Texas, with wind chills as low as 5 degrees.
The Old Farmer's Almanac, which has been in business since 1792, recently released its spring weather forecast. The outlook? "Warmer-than-normal temperatures for most of the country, with a few exceptions: southern and central California, Desert Southwest, southern Florida, and western Ohio Valley, where it will be near to below normal."
The amount of rain that accumulated at DFW International Airport broke a daily record, according to the weather service.
The NWS Fort Worth TX issued an updated report at 2:29 a.m. on Thursday for strong thunderstorms until 3 a.m. The alert is for Palo Pinto, Parker, Erath and Hood counties.
USGS has confirmed a 4.5 magnitude earthquake near Falls City, tied for fifth-biggest in Texas since the start of 2024, records show.
Much of the DFW metroplex received 2 to 6 inches of rain overnight, resulting in some flooding and high water on area roads. The storms will move out quickly though, leaving dry weather and a return of sunshine by midday Thursday.
A sprawling winter storm that is pushing slowly across the United States will bring a risk of severe weather and excessive rainfall to a large part of the south-central United States from Wednesday into Friday. Isolated thunderstorms, flooding rains and damaging winds are all possible in an area between East Texas and western Kentucky.