|
Somerset, Kentucky 7 Day Weather Forecast
Wx Forecast - Wx Discussion - Wx Aviation
|
NWS Forecast for Somerset KY
National Weather Service Forecast for:
Somerset KY
Issued by: National Weather Service Jackson, KY |
| Updated: 8:46 am EST Dec 9, 2025 |
|
Today
 Decreasing Clouds
|
Tonight
 Partly Cloudy then Mostly Cloudy and Breezy
|
Wednesday
 Chance Showers and Windy
|
Wednesday Night
 Slight Chance Rain/Snow then Slight Chance Snow Showers
|
Thursday
 Mostly Cloudy
|
Thursday Night
 Slight Chance Snow
|
Friday
 Partly Sunny
|
Friday Night
 Slight Chance Rain/Snow
|
Saturday
 Partly Sunny then Slight Chance Rain
|
| Hi 46 °F |
Lo 39 °F |
Hi 47 °F⇓ |
Lo 28 °F |
Hi 38 °F |
Lo 29 °F |
Hi 46 °F |
Lo 27 °F |
Hi 43 °F |
|
Today
|
Mostly cloudy, then gradually becoming sunny, with a high near 46. South southwest wind 10 to 14 mph, with gusts as high as 25 mph. |
Tonight
|
Partly cloudy, with a steady temperature around 39. Breezy, with a south southwest wind 10 to 16 mph, with gusts as high as 26 mph. |
Wednesday
|
A 50 percent chance of showers, mainly after 8am. Mostly cloudy, with a temperature rising to near 47 by 9am, then falling to around 40 during the remainder of the day. Windy, with a southwest wind 17 to 21 mph, with gusts as high as 37 mph. New precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch possible. |
Wednesday Night
|
A slight chance of rain and snow showers before 10pm, then a slight chance of snow showers between 10pm and 1am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 28. West northwest wind 6 to 14 mph, with gusts as high as 28 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20%. |
Thursday
|
Mostly cloudy, with a high near 38. West wind 6 to 9 mph, with gusts as high as 15 mph. |
Thursday Night
|
A 20 percent chance of snow. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 29. |
Friday
|
Partly sunny, with a high near 46. |
Friday Night
|
A slight chance of rain and snow before 1am, then a slight chance of rain. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 27. Chance of precipitation is 20%. |
Saturday
|
A 20 percent chance of rain after 1pm. Partly sunny, with a high near 43. |
Saturday Night
|
A chance of rain before 1am, then a chance of snow. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 21. Chance of precipitation is 30%. |
Sunday
|
Mostly sunny, with a high near 31. |
Sunday Night
|
Mostly clear, with a low around 13. |
Monday
|
Mostly sunny, with a high near 43. |
Forecast from NOAA-NWS
for Somerset KY.
|
Weather Forecast Discussion
159
FXUS63 KJKL 091351
AFDJKL
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION
National Weather Service Jackson KY
851 AM EST Tue Dec 9 2025
.KEY MESSAGES...
- Gusty southwesterly winds between 30 and 40 mph are likely on
Wednesday.
- Snow showers are expected to produce spatially variable
accumulations and localized travel impacts on Wednesday night
into Thursday morning.
- A clipper system is expected to produce more widespread winter
precipitation on Thursday night into Friday morning.
- A much colder than normal airmass is forecast to move into the
region late next weekend.
&&
.UPDATE...
Issued at 848 AM EST TUE DEC 9 2025
Updated the forecast by incorporating the latest weather
observations from around the area. Hourly temperature and
dewpoints had the biggest adjustments this morning. Otherwise no
major changes were made to the forecast.
&&
.SHORT TERM...(Today through Wednesday)
Issued at 530 AM EST TUE DEC 9 2025
Temperatures vary widely across the forecast area this morning, ranging
from the mid teens to near 20 in the far north where skies have
remained clear to the mid 20s to lower 30s farther south where a
low stratus deck has been persistent. A glance at the surface map
reveals high pressure extending from Southern Quebec tracing
southward to over the Southern Appalachians and then westward
across the Lower Mississippi Valley. A weak ~1007 mb surface low
is noted near Duluth, MN with a warm front extending southward
along the Mississippi River. A much stronger ~990 mb surface
clipper low is noted over Alberta. The latest 500 hPa weather map
shows much of the CONUS east of the Rockies under a broad trough.
An embedded vorticity max is noted near Duluth, MN, while another
vorticity max is noted over Western Canada (near the clipper low).
The warm front and its associated upper level disturbance will
sweep eastward today, crossing eastern Kentucky with little more
than a period of increased cloud cover. Meanwhile, the surface
high pressure slowly departs off the Atlantic Seaboard. A robust
~30 kt 925 mb southwesterly jet will develop behind the front.
With the diurnal heating, the mixing layer should deepen
sufficiently for mixed layer momentum transfer values of 15 to 25
kts across the area, a good proxy for peak surface wind gusts. The
pressure gradient will only tighten more tonight as the aforementioned
clipper initially over Alberta races southeast to over Lake
Michigan late tonight while deepening to ~980 mb or lower. This
will almost certainly keep mixing going overnight (or reengage
mixing shortly after sunset if boundary layer decoupling is able
to occur in some of the more sheltered valley locales). Anticipate
that winds will further increase on Wednesday as the GFS BUFKIT
soundings show mixed-layer momentum transfer increasing to 25-35+
kts with heating. Multiple rounds of light precipitation appear
probable on Wednesday; the first is a round of showery
precipitation in the morning to midday associated with a strong
vorticity lobe within the 500 hPa trough axis. The second round,
more likely to mix with snow, comes during the evening with a
strong cold front trailing behind the clipper. Soundings suggest
brief graupel is possible with any embedded convective elements,
although a switch to all snow cannot be entirely ruled out,
especially on the back edge of the quickly moving cold front.
Strong CAA follows heading into the beginning of the long-term.
In sensible weather terms, look for a cool start of the day
yielding to increasing sunshine and high temperatures rebounding
into the lower to middle 40s while the southwest breeze picks up
and becomes gusty (15 to 25 mph gusts from the southwest). For
tonight, the breeze remains gusty and may actually strengthen in
more exposed locales. Temperatures may dip back into the 30s for a
time this evening but will almost certainly rise back to near or
even well into the 40s. On Wednesday, it will become windy with
multiple rounds of showers, possibly mixed with graupel and even
some flakes. Southwest wind gusts in excess of 30 mph are probable
for most locations outside of the sheltered valley locales, most
widespread during the afternoon and evening. Temperatures peak in
the mid 40s north to near 50 south before dropping.
.LONG TERM...(After midnight Wednesday night through Monday)
Issued at 636 AM EST Tue Dec 9 2025
An active synoptic weather pattern will bring periodic precipitation
chances and shots of colder air to the forecast area over the next
seven days. The period is defined by broad troughing over much of
the eastern CONUS, with embedded shortwave disturbances rotating
through the resultant mean northwesterly flow aloft. At the surface,
this translates to a series of quick-moving, clipper-type systems
approaching the Greater Ohio River Valley. The 00z deterministic
forecast guidance suite appears to be coming closer to a consensus
regarding the timing and evolution of these systems relative to what
was observed at this time yesterday, but there remains a significant
deal of model spread later on in the forecast period.
When the period opens on Wednesday night, mid/upper-level troughing
will have dug deep into the Eastern CONUS. That trough`s axis will
be positioned in the vicinity of the forecast area, marking the
passage of a cold front at the surface. Thus, a cold air advection
regime is likely to set up overnight into Thursday. Models
collectively depict the 540 decameter critical thickness line over
the Cumberland River Basin on Thursday morning as 850mb temperatures
drop to between -5 and -10 degrees Celsius. These values favor a
transition over to snow showers overnight, and surface temperatures
are forecast to drop below freezing area-wide after midnight.
Ensemble probabilities for measurable snowfall (>= 0.01 inches) are
above 70% for locations east of the I-75 corridor, and locally
higher-accumulations appear possible wherever mesoscale-type
precipitation enhancements materialize. The post-frontal west-
northwesterly low-level flow regime should lead to some orographic
enhancements in the higher terrain locales of Southeastern Kentucky.
Likewise, some of the currently-available higher-resolution guidance
(the NAM) suggests that a fetch off Lake Michigan could overlap with
favorable snow squall parameters to yield locally higher
accumulations in narrower precipitation bands. The other CAMs will
need to be watched closely as this system enters their temporal
range, as these smaller-scale details are smoothed over in the
baseline NBM grids used to populate the long-term forecast grids.
The showery nature of Thursday night`s precipitation will make
accumulations more spotty, and it is plausible that there will be
high spatial variability in this system`s storm totals. If the
smaller-scale accumulation enhancements come to fruition, isolated
travel issues, including potential visibility reductions, could
materialize on Thursday morning. Highs will likely struggle to get
much warmer than the mid-30s on Thursday afternoon due to the cold
air advection regime and residual cloud cover lingering over the
area. Additional light snow showers or flurries cannot be ruled out,
but more widespread precipitation chances return on Thursday night
as another clipper system approaches.
By Thursday night, the deeper upper level troughing will have lifted
northeast, although there is generally good model agreement that
another shortwave disturbance will rotate around its backside and
into the Ohio River Valley by Friday morning. The cold air in place
out ahead of this particular system should allow precipitation to
begin as snow, although as its surface low reflection approaches,
low level winds will back towards the southwest. This could
introduce warm air in the bottom portions of the atmospheric column,
which could result in a transition to liquid precipitation types.
Once this system enters the temporal range of higher-resolution
forecast guidance, soundings and temperature profiles will need to
be monitored closely, as these will provide greater insight into the
p-type forecast and the timing of any transitions. The cold air
should stick around for longer the further north and east one goes
into the forecast area, and locations northeast of the Cumberland
River basin have the highest ensemble probabilties (>50% chance) of
measurable snow with this second system. These probabilities
increase towards the I-64 corridor, where there is a >80% chance of
measurable snow and a 40-50% chance of seeing an inch. Due to
greater precipitation coverage and colder antecedent temperatures,
more widespread travel impacts cannot be ruled out on Friday
morning, and interests with AM travel plans should monitor future
forecast updates closely.
Compared to what was forecast a few days ago, guidance has trended
warmer for the Friday afternoon to Saturday morning time frame.
Shortwave ridging is expected to build into the Upper Midwest and
interrupt the train of clipper systems around then, leading to a
brief period of midlevel height rises and quasi-zonal flow aloft.
Coupled with the previously-discussed southwesterly return flow,
this indicates that low-level temperatures will moderate to above
freezing values on Friday afternoon. Saturday`s MinT and MaxT grids
will likely trend upwards in future NBM runs, but spread begins to
increase in the temperature guidance beyond then. This makes the
precipitation forecast for a third system on Saturday night more
ambiguous, although guidance collectively points towards a much
colder than average airmass advecting into the region on Sunday. For
now, the precipitation type forecast reflects a changeover from rain
to snow as the cold air arrives. The magnitude of this cold is
highly uncertain, as demonstrated by the 11 to 12 degrees of
standard deviation in the European Ensemble`s MOS guidance. It is
very difficult to provide specific sensible weather details for
Sunday and beyond given the compounding uncertainty, but WPC has
maintained a 40-60% chance of below-normal temperatures in Kentucky
early next week. Average low temperatures for mid-December in
Eastern Kentucky are highs in the mid 40s and lows near 32 degrees.
The current 25th and 75th NBM temperature percentile data for Monday
are 11-22 degrees for AM lows and 27-44 degrees for PM highs.
Therefore, it is likely to be noticeably colder than usual at the
end of the long term forecast period, regardless of specific
values.
&&
.AVIATION...(For the 12Z TAFS through 12Z Wednesday morning)
ISSUED AT 718 AM EST TUE DEC 9 2025
The MVFR stratus deck over central and northern portions of the JKL
CWA at TAF issuance is eroding from the south. That should
accelerate, causing the deck to dissipate over the the next 2-3
hours, leaving just mid and high level clouds for the remainder of
the TAF period. Winds will become southwest today and increase to
between 5 and 15 kts with gusts of 15 to 25 kts. The strongest winds
will occur near/west of I-75 and near/north of I-64. Winds aloft
will begin to ramp up tonight ahead of an approaching cold front,
yielding the threat of LLWS for most of tonight.
&&
.JKL WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
None.
&&
$$
UPDATE...GINNICK
SHORT TERM...GEERTSON
LONG TERM...MARCUS
AVIATION...GEERTSON
View a Different U.S. Forecast Discussion Location
(In alphabetical order by state)
|
|
|
|