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Winston-Salem, North Carolina 7 Day Weather Forecast
Wx Forecast - Wx Discussion - Wx Aviation
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NWS Forecast for Winston-Salem NC
National Weather Service Forecast for:
Winston-Salem NC
Issued by: National Weather Service Raleigh, NC |
| Updated: 10:56 am EDT Jun 17, 2026 |
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This Afternoon
 Sunny
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Tonight
 Increasing Clouds
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Thursday
 Partly Sunny then Chance T-storms
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Thursday Night
 Chance T-storms then Chance Showers
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Juneteenth
 Chance Showers then Chance T-storms
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Friday Night
 Chance T-storms then Partly Cloudy
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Saturday
 Sunny
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Saturday Night
 Mostly Clear
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Sunday
 Sunny
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| Hi 91 °F |
Lo 71 °F |
Hi 95 °F |
Lo 69 °F |
Hi 89 °F |
Lo 63 °F |
Hi 88 °F |
Lo 64 °F |
Hi 92 °F |
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Hazardous Weather Outlook
Special Weather Statement
This Afternoon
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Sunny, with a high near 91. Southwest wind around 9 mph. |
Tonight
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Increasing clouds, with a low around 71. Southwest wind 6 to 9 mph. |
Thursday
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A chance of showers and thunderstorms after 2pm. Partly sunny, with a high near 95. Southwest wind 13 to 18 mph, with gusts as high as 33 mph. Chance of precipitation is 30%. |
Thursday Night
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A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 69. Southwest wind 7 to 14 mph, with gusts as high as 22 mph. Chance of precipitation is 40%. New rainfall amounts of less than a tenth of an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms. |
Juneteenth
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A chance of showers, with thunderstorms also possible after 2pm. Partly sunny, with a high near 89. West wind 5 to 7 mph. Chance of precipitation is 50%. New rainfall amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible. |
Friday Night
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A chance of thunderstorms before 8pm. Partly cloudy, with a low around 63. Chance of precipitation is 30%. New precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms. |
Saturday
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Sunny, with a high near 88. |
Saturday Night
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Mostly clear, with a low around 64. |
Sunday
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Sunny, with a high near 92. |
Sunday Night
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Partly cloudy, with a low around 68. |
Monday
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Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm. Partly sunny, with a high near 91. Chance of precipitation is 60%. |
Monday Night
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Showers and thunderstorms likely. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 68. Chance of precipitation is 60%. |
Tuesday
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Mostly sunny, with a high near 89. |
Forecast from NOAA-NWS
for Winston-Salem NC.
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Weather Forecast Discussion
841
FXUS62 KRAH 171610
AFDRAH
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Raleigh NC
1210 PM EDT Wed Jun 17 2026
.WHAT HAS CHANGED...
* Increased southwesterly winds and wind gusts on Thursday.
&&
.KEY MESSAGES...
As of 245 AM Wednesday...
1) Potential for hazardous heat appears likely on Thursday for
the Coastal Plain and Sandhills.
2) Conditional threat for strong to severe storms capable of
producing damaging straight-line wind gusts Thursday afternoon
and evening.
3) Atypical Increased Fire Danger possible on Thursday as
strong gusty winds and hot temperatures may overlap with
critically dry, drought-cured fuels.
4) The best chance of showers and thunderstorms appears to be
late Thursday into Friday. As mentioned yesterday, do not expect
drought relief until we get a pattern change.
&&
.DISCUSSION...
As of 245 AM Wednesday...
KEY MESSAGE 1...
Potential for hazardous heat appears likely on Thursday for the
Coastal Plain and Sandhills
A significant area of low pressure (sub 990 at times)
traversing the Great Lakes will advect anomalously warm 850mb
temps over the Mid-Atlantic and Carolinas from the central
Plains by Thurs. This will bring back the risk for hazardous
heat on Thurs. A potential failure mode will be the chance for
upstream convection to shift into the region from the Ohio
Valley and/or any terrain induced convection in the western
Piedmont. This leads to a low confidence temperature forecast
across the Piedmont. Although confidence continues to
increase that the Coastal Plain and Sandhills will remain dry
through the daytime hours.
Thurs will feature the best chance for hazardous heat to
develop when 20-22C 850mb temperatures spread across the area,
and would support 2m temperatures of upper 90s to around 100,
given sufficient insolation and limited convection/outflow.
HeatRisk highlights widespread Major category is likely for the
eastern Piedmont, Sandhills and Coastal Plain, indicating that
not only is this heat particularly unusual, it is correlated
with high levels of heat illnesses as noted by historical CDC
heat-health data, and this heat could produce health impacts on
all populations, especially those without adequate hydration and
cooling.
KEY MESSAGE 2...
Conditional threat for strong to severe storms capable of
producing damaging straight-line wind gusts Thursday afternoon
and evening.
Within the southwesterly flow at the surface, a moderately
unstable air mass is expected to develop as temperatures rise
into the 90s and surface dew points rise into the mid 60s to
near 70 degrees. Enhanced lower tropospheric flow, moderately
steep low-lvl lapse rates, and moderate instability may support
isolated strong to severe winds, but lack of much dry air in the
mid/upper-lvls should mitigate DCAPE and low-lvl theta-e
differences.
Given the marginally favorable environment, strong to severe
wind gusts will likely have to rely on the development and
maintenance of any multicell storm clusters, which given 30-35
kts of cloud-layer shear, would be possible but highly
conditional.
KEY MESSAGE 3...
Atypical Increased Fire Danger possible on Thursday as strong
gusty winds and hot temperatures may overlap with critically
dry, drought-cured fuels.
A tight pressure gradient and enhanced low/mid tropospheric
flow will result in breezy conditions on Thursday. Momentum-
transfer from point soundings suggest 20-30 kts gusts will be
common with periodic 35 kts gusts possible, especially where
sufficient solar insolation can more efficiently transfer winds
at the top of the mixed-layer to the surface. This combination
of strong winds and hot temperatures may result in increased
fire danger concerns despite marginal RH (40-30%) given the
incredibly dry fine fuels across the area. Additionally, strong
and erratic winds in the vicinity of thunderstorms would
increase the risk for extreme fire danger.
KEY MESSAGE 4...
The best chance of showers and thunderstorms appears to be late
Thursday into Friday. As mentioned yesterday, do not expect
drought relief until we get a pattern change.
There is still a chance of much needed rainfall Thursday night
and Friday. The potential tropical system is still expected to
track to our south, from GA across possibly SC. This would keep
the heavier and widespread showers/storms to our south. The
other potential for needed showers/storms should come with the
northern branch short wave trough that will send a surface cold
front into the region Friday. QPF still remains quite variable
and in flux, but remains rather light (mostly under a 0.25 to
0.50). The GFS shows absolutely nothing over the drought plagued
northern Piedmont of NC. The hi-res models are now coming into
range, but do not offer much hope.
We need a pattern change. The pattern has been so persistent
with either a dominate ridge aloft or a zonal flow. The areas
east of the Appalachians have had an atypical mountain shadow
hole in the rainfall due variations of a dominate westerly flow
in the mid levels for quite some time. We need a break in the
mid/upper levels over our region or a dominate Bermuda high with
SW flow aloft to consistently bring Gulf moisture and lift to
the region. This is not seen in the foreseeable future. The
zeros keep stacking up.
&&
.AVIATION /18Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH MONDAY/...
As of 1210 PM Wednesday...
While VFR conditions are likely to dominate across central NC
terminals for much of the next 24 hours, there are a few items of
concern to aviation interests. A few hours of MVFR cigs are possible
07z-14z Thu morning, mainly across the far southern areas including
RCZ/MEB/FAY but perhaps spreading further N to INT/GSO/RDU. In
addition, an isolated shower or storm may approach INT/GSO toward
the very end of the TAF valid period, but the better chances won`t
be until after 18z Thu so will not mention this in this set of TAFs.
Finally, gusty winds from the SW are likely everywhere starting
shortly after 10z Thu and persisting through Thu afternoon,
sustained up to 15-20 kts with frequent gusts to 20-30 kts. While
the lack of a low level inversion will preclude this being a true
low-level wind shear situation, the presence of 25-35 kt winds from
the SW just aloft starting at 07z Thu and the eventual groundward
mixing-down of these winds around sunrise may induce mechanical
turbulence, particularly with small aircraft.
Looking beyond 18z Thu, isolated to scattered strong storms are
possible from mid afternoon into early Thu evening at all sites
ahead of a cold front, and these may produce localized enhanced wind
gusts and heavy downpours generating local sub-VFR conditions. A
better chance of rain and isolated storms will arrive late Thu
evening lasting into early Fri as tropical moisture crosses the
Southeast states, and sub-VFR conditions may occur with this
activity, best chance at FAY. VFR conditions should then dominate
from late Fri through at least Sun, with another chance of sub-VFR
stratus Sun night into early Mon.
&&
.CLIMATE...
Record High Temperatures:
June 18: KGSO: 100/1944 KRDU: 98/2015 KFAY: 102/1944
Record High Minimum Temperatures:
June 18: KGSO: 73/2018 KRDU: 77/2025 KFAY: 76/2017
June 19: KGSO: 77/1970 KRDU: 73/2025 KFAY: 77/2017
&&
.RAH WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
None.
&&
$$
DISCUSSION...AS/PWB
AVIATION...Hartfield
CLIMATE...RAH
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