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Lafayette, Indiana 7 Day Weather Forecast
Wx Forecast - Wx Discussion - Wx Aviation
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NWS Forecast for Lafayette IN
National Weather Service Forecast for:
Lafayette IN
Issued by: National Weather Service Indianapolis, IN |
| Updated: 11:47 am EST Dec 11, 2025 |
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Today
 Scattered Flurries
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Tonight
 Snow
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Friday
 Chance Snow
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Friday Night
 Mostly Cloudy
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Saturday
 Chance Snow then Snow Likely
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Saturday Night
 Chance Snow
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Sunday
 Cold
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Sunday Night
 Mostly Clear
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Monday
 Mostly Sunny
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| Hi 30 °F |
Lo 28 °F |
Hi 32 °F |
Lo 14 °F |
Hi 17 °F |
Lo -5 °F |
Hi 7 °F |
Lo -3 °F |
Hi 21 °F |
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Winter Weather Advisory
Hazardous Weather Outlook
Today
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Scattered flurries. Cloudy, with a high near 30. West southwest wind 3 to 6 mph. |
Tonight
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Snow. Steady temperature around 28. Light and variable wind becoming east northeast 5 to 7 mph after midnight. Chance of precipitation is 100%. New snow accumulation of 2 to 4 inches possible. |
Friday
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A 30 percent chance of snow, mainly before 7am. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 32. Northeast wind around 6 mph becoming northwest in the afternoon. |
Friday Night
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Mostly cloudy, with a low around 14. West wind 5 to 9 mph. |
Saturday
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Snow likely, mainly after 1pm. Cloudy, with a high near 17. West northwest wind around 8 mph. Chance of precipitation is 70%. |
Saturday Night
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A 30 percent chance of snow before 1am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around -5. West northwest wind around 8 mph. |
Sunday
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Sunny and cold, with a high near 7. West northwest wind 6 to 8 mph. |
Sunday Night
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Mostly clear, with a low around -3. Light and variable wind. |
Monday
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Mostly sunny, with a high near 21. South southwest wind 6 to 10 mph, with gusts as high as 20 mph. |
Monday Night
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Partly cloudy, with a low around 13. Southwest wind 5 to 7 mph. |
Tuesday
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Mostly sunny, with a high near 32. |
Tuesday Night
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Mostly cloudy, with a low around 27. |
Wednesday
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Mostly cloudy, with a high near 40. |
Forecast from NOAA-NWS
for Lafayette IN.
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Weather Forecast Discussion
187
FXUS63 KIND 111505
AFDIND
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Indianapolis IN
1005 AM EST Thu Dec 11 2025
.KEY MESSAGES...
- Accumulating snow likely Thursday night into Friday morning with a
narrow swath of 3-5 inches of snow
- Second round of accumulating light-moderate snowfall Saturday
midday to evening
- Arctic outbreak late Saturday to Monday AM...low temperatures near
or below zero...dangerous sub-zero wind chills down to -20F.
&&
.FORECAST UPDATE...
Issued at 1004 AM EST Thu Dec 11 2025
The freezing drizzle threat persists across portions of Central
Indiana, including the Indianapolis Metro area, surrounding
counties, and points south and east where dry air has been slower to
arrive from the west. Temperatures remain steady in the upper 20s as
widespread low clouds prevent much heating of the boundary layer.
Little change in thinking with the near term forecast compared to
what was discussed in the previous mesoscale discussion. The threat
for freezing drizzle and flurries will gradually taper off from the
north and west as drier air slowly advects in at the surface. Patchy
freezing drizzle and snow flurries will continue to result in slick
travel conditions over the next several hours in the aforementioned
locations. Brief reductions in visibility also expected at times
within areas of light precipitation.
A brief dry break is in the forecast this afternoon into the early
evening hours before accumulating snow pushes in from the west
around and after sunset.
&&
.MESOSCALE UPDATE...
Issued at 747 AM EST Thu Dec 11 2025
...FREEZING DRIZZLE ACROSS CENTRAL INDIANA THIS MORNING...
Freezing drizzle has been reported across the state of Indiana this
morning leading to a thin glaze of ice developing on surfaces.
Satellite imagery shows widespread low stratus over Central Indiana
as leftover moisture from yesterdays system is trapped under a
strong inversion 1.2 km agl, according to the 12z ILX sounding. An
approaching 140 kt jet streak to the west has placed Indiana within
an area of upper level divergence and enhanced lift within the left
exit region of the jet streak, working to squeeze out any remaining
moisture. PBL temperatures ranging from -2C near the surface to -10C
at the top of the inversion height support mainly supercooled liquid
hydrometeors with a few snowflakes mixed in resulting in the light
freezing drizzle.
Observations and soundings upstream indicate drier air within the
boundary layer slowly advecting in from the west. As the area of
high pressure slides eastward over Indiana, drier air should shut
off light precipitation by the late morning to early afternoon
hours. Confidence is low on the longevity of the freezing drizzle
threat, but current thinking is that icy conditions should persist
through the next several hours. Main concerns this morning are black
ice development on roadways and minor ice accumulations on untreated
surfaces.
&&
.SHORT TERM (Today and tonight)...
Issued at 250 AM EST Thu Dec 11 2025
Central Indiana will now face a succession of Alberta Clipper lows
Central Indiana will remain in the path of strong upper level NW
flow, and an efficient set up for quickly developing lows out of the
Canadian Rockies. The second of these systems is expected to pass
through late Thursday through Friday morning. Prior to its arrival,
weak low level vort maxes interacting with lingering stratus in the
broader cyclonic flow will likely lead to scattered flurries this
morning and into the afternoon. These should not accumulate to
anything, but provide periodic snowflakes across the region.
The previous system brought through strong CAA, of which sank the
baroclinic zone southward placing central Indiana in an ideal zone
for both cyclogenesis and temperatures cold enough for snowfall.
This second low will be weaker than Wednesday`s system, but will
likely still have just as much forcing as it pushes across the strong
baroclinic zone.
These clipper systems along strong temperature gradients typically
produce narrow corridors of moderate QPF, and this one is expected
to be no different with a general 50-75mile wide corridor of highest
QPF. Members of the HREF are still unaligned on expected placement
of this corridor leading to some uncertainty with only 15 to 18
hours until precipitation onset. The current range of potential
outcomes includes as far north as a Crawfordsville to Newcastle
line, to as far south as Vincennes to French Lick. That said, the
greatest likelihood for this corridor is still along or just south
of the I-74 corridor including cities like Greencastle, Bloomington,
Columbus, and Seymour.
When looking at snow totals, there are multiple things to keep in
mind but the main two are overall QPF and SLRs. Model soundings
showcase a deep isothermal layer as the low arrives between -6C and -
10C. This isn`t the most ideal temperature for efficient dendrite
growth, but deep saturation above 6km and surface temperatures
remaining 5-6 degrees below freezing should lead to SLRs between 12-
14:1 across most of central Indiana. Clipper system tend to be on
the lower end for QPF due to weak moisture return but given a
prolonged 9 to 12 hour stretch of snowfall, total QPF amounts of
0.25-0.35 looks to be the likely peak for the greatest corridor.
This should lead to a swath of snowfall between 3 and 5 inches.
Slightly higher amounts are possible where the strongest
frontogenetical forcing occurs as this forcing will likely be
slightly further aloft and within more ideal DGZ temperatures.
Forecast timing has a bit more confidence, as the margin of error is
larger and ensembles have a tighter spread. Currently, snow is
expected to reach the Indiana border between 4PM and 7PM on Thursday
and exit Friday morning between 5AM and 8AM.
&&
.LONG TERM (Friday through Wednesday)...
Issued at 250 AM EST Thu Dec 11 2025
Coldest portions of a very large and anomalously cold arctic surface
ridge that will prevail over Indiana late Saturday to Monday
morning...will be bookended by more reasonable early-weekend cold
with another light to moderate snowfall event through PM hours
Saturday...and steady moderation through the early workweek to
seasonable readings by the end of the period.
Lingering snow showers from the short term`s boisterous clipper
system should last into Friday morning across most of the region,
especially eastern zones that could see an additional very thin
coating after daybreak. Central/southern zones to likely creep
above freezing Friday afternoon...which will be the last time until
at least Tuesday. Only light to moderate wind gusts to end the
workweek behind the departing system...as large upper polar trough
occupying much of North America...adjusts around a broad embedded
short wave crossing the northern Great Lakes, bringing brief zonal
flow over the Midwest. Nevertheless, Friday night will be
noticeably colder than the short term, with lows in the teens to
around 20F for most spots, and some stronger gusts nearing 20 mph
dropping wind chills as low as single digits for much of the CWA.
Biggest precipitation event for the long term will be yet another
clipper-type system within the overall west-northwest flow...
streaming east within the midday to evening hours. Moderate
confidence in widespread 0.10 to 0.20 liquid equivalents...yet less
certainty in location of embedded heavier bands closer to 0.25
inches, although greatest likelihood south of the I-74 corridor.
While this episode should once again feature a thermal profile below
H600 generally around negative 10 degrees Celsius...guidance is
showing a growing DGZ presence through the latter half of the
episode for the I-74 corridor and north. Resultant increase in SLR/
fluffier snow for late day/evening hours would help boost total
snowfall for these areas north of the main swath, bringing the
potential for 2-4 inches of new snowfall over most of the region.
Cold conditions including dangerously low wind chills will be the
long term`s greatest hazard. This will starting Saturday for at
least northwest counties, where the earlier onset of snow will hold
readings in the teens. West-northwest to northwest cold advective
breezes gusting to 15-20 mph will be the rule late Saturday through
Sunday afternoon as the arctic surface high`s center tracks from the
Canadian border to Illinois. The departing clipper will allow skies
to clear late Saturday night, with the fresh addition to the snow
pack contributing to overnight lows in the negative single digits,
and therefore dangerous wind chills falling from around 5 above to
perhaps negative 15 to negative 25 degrees.
Sunday should be the only bitterly cold daytime when most locales
may fail to climb above the single digits, with wind chill values
possibly held below zero throughout the breezy day. Higher
confidence in another dangerously cold night to end the weekend with
lows again likely dropping into the negative single digits...
although lighter winds should partially mitigate wind chills with WC
values potentially falling to Advisory criteria for a second night.
Welcomed moderation progged for the early to mid-workweek...with
solid resurrection of readings around the Monday timeframe hopefully
thwarting any further negative wind chills.
Lower confidence in timing/amounts of any weakly-forced
precipitation into the mid-week...when transition to more zonal
upper pattern allows slow increase of broad Gulf moisture to overrun
the Ohio Valley and possibly the Midwest...with perhaps a few rain
showers that could have an icy onset if only from very cold ground
tempertures. The current forecast maximum temperatures across the
region Wednesday are 39-46F.
&&
.AVIATION (12Z TAF Issuance)...
Issued at 630 AM EST Thu Dec 11 2025
Impacts:
- MVFR ceilings with flurries today
- Snow arrives with rapidly deteriorating conditions early this
evening
Discussion:
MVFR stratus should stick throughout the day at KIND and KLAF, but
there is some potential for brief VFR at KHUF and KBMG this afternoon.
Within stratus, isolated flurries are possible, but no VIS
reductions are expected. Westerly winds will back to southwest by
this afternoon at less than 10kts.
Widespread snow will expand into central Indiana from the northwest
early this evening with conditions rapidly deteriorating through the
evening as snow rates increase. Greatest impacts are expected at
KIND/KHUF/KBMG, where periods of LIFR VIS and CIGs are likely. Best
chance for LIFR conditions are between 01Z and 08Z.
&&
.IND WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
Winter Weather Advisory from 5 PM this afternoon to 10 AM EST
Friday for INZ028>030-035>037-039-043>048-051>057-060>065-
067>072.
&&
$$
UPDATE...CM
SHORT TERM...Updike
LONG TERM...AGM
AVIATION...Updike
MESOSCALE...CM
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