144
FXUS61 KLWX 180137
AFDLWX
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Baltimore MD/Washington DC
937 PM EDT Sun May 17 2026
.WHAT HAS CHANGED...
No changes were made to the forecast at this time, mainly
updated the wording of the discussion. Added some detail about
how hot Wednesday will be in to Key Message 1, while keeping the
severe threat on Wednesday in its own Key Message bullet.
&&
.KEY MESSAGES...
- 1) Near-record warmth Monday through Wednesday, with isolated
storms possible over the mountains Monday and Tuesday.
- 2) A strong cold front moves through on Wednesday,
bringing chances for thunderstorms. Much cooler and showery
conditions are expected to end the week.
&&
.DISCUSSION...
KEY MESSAGE 1...Near-record warmth Monday through Wednesday,
with isolated storms possible over the mountains Monday and
Tuesday.
Conditions remain dry and mild across the area this evening. It
will be another warm night tonight, with just a few passing high
clouds. Patchy fog may also be possible late tonight, especially
to the west of the Blue Ridge. Low temperatures are forecast to
be in the 60s.
Tomorrow looks like it will be the hottest day of the year thus
far, with temperatures forecast to climb into the mid 90s across
the lower elevations (80s in the mountains). As upper level
ridging strengthens overhead, most locations should stay dry
with mostly sunny skies. The exception will be far northwestern
portions of the forecast area (the WV Panhandle and Western
Maryland), where many forecast models show thunderstorms forming
during the late afternoon and evening hours. If storms do form,
many of the ingredients are there for storms to produce gusty
winds. Forecast soundings show steep low-level lapse rates,
inverted V soundings with ample dry air below the cloud base,
MLCAPE values of 1000-2000 J/kg, DCAPE values of 1000-1300 J/kg,
and enough mid-level flow (20-30 kt) to provide some
organization to any cold pools that develop. Some CAMs show
gusts of near or over 50 knots with these storms as they track
from southwest to northeast, and nearly all CAMs shows gusts in
excess of 40 knots. As a result, the potential for severe
storms tomorrow across the West Virginia Panhandle and Western
Maryland bears watching. Any storms should wind down through the
evening hours, with dry conditions expected for much of tomorrow
night. Hot conditions are expected again on Tuesday, but the
upper ridge will continue to strengthen aloft, making conditions
even less favorable for the development of storms. However, an
isolated storm or two can`t be completely ruled out over the
higher terrain.
Outside of the afternoon/evening shower and thunderstorm threat will
be the bigger story which is the heat. This will become really
pronounced by Monday and continue through Wednesday, with widespread
highs in the low to mid 90s each day. Tuesday will mark the
hottest day of the next 7 with highs in the mid to upper 90s
east of the mountains. Wednesday will then be slightly cooler
compared to Tuesday, but still well into the 90s for most. The
humidity will gradually increase each day, though not to the
extent where heat headlines will be needed. Something that we`ll
continue to monitor since we are early in the season. Don`t
expect too much relief from the heat at night with low
temperatures Monday and Tuesday nights in the mid 60s and low
70s.
KEY MESSAGE 2...A strong cold front moves through on Wednesday,
bringing chances for thunderstorms. Much cooler and showery
conditions are expected to end the week.
A mid-week frontal system remains on track to impact the area,
albeit with some uncertainties in the overall details. Most notably,
the core of the forcing and stronger wind fields with this trough
look to be well north of the region. Both of those components will
lend itself to a less organized convective event. However, the
timing of the cold front does align closely to the peak in diurnal
heating. Given multiple days of well above average temperatures,
this system will be conducive to shower and thunderstorm
development. This should especially be the case along the developing
lee trough and trailing cold front. The severe weather aspect
remains the biggest question mark at this time.
Any convective chances likely wind down on Wednesday night as the
cold front eventually settles near the Virginia Tidewater region on
Thursday morning. This supports a shift to northerly winds on
Thursday which is accompanied by a rather dramatic cool down.
Forecast highs are likely to not escape the upper 60s to low 70s
which is around 15 to 25 degrees lower than previous days. Expect a
similar temperature forecast for Friday as well with the shift to an
onshore easterly wind. A gradual warm up is possible next weekend,
but this will depend on the degree of cloud cover and extent of
rainfall.
This overall pattern remains quite stagnant as the earlier frontal
zone stalls near the southeastern U.S. Meanwhile, strong high
pressure settles across eastern Canada down into New England. Within
the southwesterly flow aloft, a series of mid/upper disturbances
will keep daily chances for rain in the forecast. The setup looks
more convectively-stable in nature which would limit thunderstorm
chances for this late week period.
&&
.AVIATION /00Z MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/...
Prevailing VFR conditions are expected across the terminals
through Tuesday as high pressure strengthens offshore.
South/southwesterly winds return Monday and Tuesday gusting
between 15 to 20 kts during the afternoon and evening hours.
Daily shower and thunderstorm chances will occur each afternoon
although coverage will be spotty in nature between the
terminals. The highest confidence for showers and t-storms
appears to be west of MRB, HGR, and FDK. where brief reductions
are possible. Elsewhere confidence remains low given the lack of
a lifting mechanism.
Some restrictions are possible on Wednesday, particularly given the
expectation of afternoon/evening showers and thunderstorms with the
cold front. Prevailing winds will be out of the southwest through
much of the day before this front passes through. Some low ceilings
are possible into Wednesday night as the system presses off to the
south and east. Winds shift to north to northwesterly for much of
Thursday before turning more easterly by Friday. With the presence
of low clouds and rain at times, sub-VFR conditions are looking
possible during the Thursday through Friday timeframe.
&&
.MARINE...
Sub-SCA level winds are expected through Monday morning.
South southeasterly winds return Monday with gusts up to 20
knots across the bay and lower tidal Potomac. A Small Craft
Advisory was issued for Monday afternoon into Monday evening.
Additional SCAs may be needed due channeling Tuesday into
Tuesday night, especially over the wider waters. Winds will
continue out of the south and southwest with gusts up to 20 kts.
For Wednesday, marine winds ahead of the front should largely
meander between south and southwesterly. This cold front will
increase the risk of showers and thunderstorms, particularly during
the afternoon/evening hours. Any of the stronger convection may
require Special Marine Warnings. Overall storm chances wind down
late Wednesday night as winds shift to mainly northerly on Thursday.
A frontal surge will bring gusts up to 20 knots which may require
Small Craft Advisories through midday Thursday. Thereafter, winds
drop below advisory thresholds.
&&
.CLIMATE...
Here are some daily temperature records during the May 18-20,
2026 timeframe:
A `+` sign indicates multiple years currently hold that record.
A `!` sign indicates the record is forecast to be tied or broken.
***MONDAY, MAY 18TH, 2026***
LOCATION RECORD HIGH (YEAR) RECORD WARM LOW (YEAR)
Washington-National (DCA) 96F (1877) 72F (2015)
Washington-Dulles (IAD) 91F (1987)! 68F (2015)!
Baltimore (BWI) 97F (1962) 70F (2017)
Baltimore Inner Harbor (DMH) 97F (1962) 75F (2017)
Martinsburg (MRB) 96F (1911) 66F (2015)!
Charlottesville (CHO) 95F (1962)+ 73F (1911)
Annapolis (NAK) 95F (1962)+ 69F (1953)+!
Hagerstown (HGR) 93F (1962) 71F (2017)
***TUESDAY, MAY 19TH, 2026***
LOCATION RECORD HIGH (YEAR) RECORD WARM LOW (YEAR)
Washington-National (DCA) 96F (1997)+ 72F (2015)!
Washington-Dulles (IAD) 92F (1997)+! 66F (2017)+!
Baltimore (BWI) 98F (1962) 75F (1877)
Baltimore Inner Harbor (DMH) 98F (1962) 78F (1962)
Martinsburg (MRB) 98F (1911) 69F (1996)!
Charlottesville (CHO) 97F (1962) 72F (1997)
Annapolis (NAK) 96F (1962) 71F (1911)!
Hagerstown (HGR) 97F (1996) 69F (2017)+!
***WEDNESDAY, MAY 20TH, 2026***
LOCATION RECORD HIGH (YEAR) RECORD WARM LOW (YEAR)
Washington-National (DCA) 96F (1996) 73F (2019)
Washington-Dulles (IAD) 93F (1996) 69F (2019)
Baltimore (BWI) 95F (1962) 71F (2019)+
Baltimore Inner Harbor (DMH) 97F (1962) 74F (1998)+
Martinsburg (MRB) 97F (1911) 70F (1998)
Charlottesville (CHO) 96F (1996) 73F (1996)
Annapolis (NAK) 98F (1997) 76F (1898)
Hagerstown (HGR) 97F (1996) 66F (1998)
&&
.LWX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
DC...None.
MD...None.
VA...None.
WV...None.
MARINE...Small Craft Advisory from 3 PM Monday to 2 AM EDT Tuesday for
ANZ531>534-537>543.
&&
$$
DISCUSSION...BRO/CJL/KJP
AVIATION...BRO/CJL
MARINE...BRO/CJL
NWS LWX Office Area Forecast Discussion