U.S. Alerts
El Dorado Weather Logo
U.S. Radar Loop Conditions Map

U.S. Color Satellite North America Color Infrared Animated Satellite Loop

Interactive Wx Map Live U.S. Google Map Radar Thumbnail Image

US Precipitation 1 day, 24 hour precipitation map

US Temperatures US Conditions Map

US Climate Data US Conditions Map

Lorain, Ohio 7 Day Weather Forecast
Wx Forecast - Wx Discussion - Wx Aviation
NWS Forecast for 2 Miles N Lorain OH
National Weather Service Forecast for: 2 Miles N Lorain OH
Issued by: National Weather Service Cleveland, OH
Updated: 10:05 am EDT Apr 2, 2026
 
Today

Today: A chance of showers before 11am, then a slight chance of showers and thunderstorms after 4pm.  Mostly cloudy, with a high near 71. East wind 9 to 13 mph becoming south in the afternoon.  Chance of precipitation is 40%. New precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Chance
Showers then
Partly Sunny

Tonight

Tonight: A chance of showers and thunderstorms before 4am, then showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm between 4am and 5am, then a chance of showers and thunderstorms after 5am.  Mostly cloudy, with a low around 62. Breezy, with a south wind 15 to 20 mph.  Chance of precipitation is 60%. New rainfall amounts of less than a tenth of an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Slight Chance
T-storms then
Showers
Likely and
Breezy
Friday

Friday: A chance of showers, with thunderstorms also possible after 2pm.  Partly sunny, with a high near 69. Breezy, with a west wind 14 to 20 mph, with gusts as high as 30 mph.  Chance of precipitation is 50%. New rainfall amounts of less than a tenth of an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Chance
Showers and
Breezy then
Chance
T-storms
Friday
Night
Friday Night: Showers and thunderstorms likely, then showers and possibly a thunderstorm after 2am.  Low around 50. Northwest wind 5 to 9 mph becoming east after midnight.  Chance of precipitation is 80%. New rainfall amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.
T-storms
Likely then
Showers

Saturday

Saturday: Showers and possibly a thunderstorm.  High near 71. South wind 11 to 18 mph, with gusts as high as 29 mph.  Chance of precipitation is 80%. New rainfall amounts between a tenth and quarter of an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Showers


Saturday
Night
Saturday Night: Showers and possibly a thunderstorm before 11pm, then showers likely.  Low around 41. Chance of precipitation is 80%. New precipitation amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.
Showers


Sunday

Sunday: Mostly cloudy, with a high near 47. Breezy.
Mostly Cloudy
and Breezy

Sunday
Night
Sunday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 37. Breezy.
Mostly Cloudy
and Breezy
then Partly
Cloudy
Monday

Monday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 50.
Mostly Sunny


Hi 71 °F Lo 62 °F Hi 69 °F Lo 50 °F Hi 71 °F Lo 41 °F Hi 47 °F Lo 37 °F Hi 50 °F

Hazardous Weather Outlook
 

Today
 
A chance of showers before 11am, then a slight chance of showers and thunderstorms after 4pm. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 71. East wind 9 to 13 mph becoming south in the afternoon. Chance of precipitation is 40%. New precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Tonight
 
A chance of showers and thunderstorms before 4am, then showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm between 4am and 5am, then a chance of showers and thunderstorms after 5am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 62. Breezy, with a south wind 15 to 20 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60%. New rainfall amounts of less than a tenth of an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Friday
 
A chance of showers, with thunderstorms also possible after 2pm. Partly sunny, with a high near 69. Breezy, with a west wind 14 to 20 mph, with gusts as high as 30 mph. Chance of precipitation is 50%. New rainfall amounts of less than a tenth of an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Friday Night
 
Showers and thunderstorms likely, then showers and possibly a thunderstorm after 2am. Low around 50. Northwest wind 5 to 9 mph becoming east after midnight. Chance of precipitation is 80%. New rainfall amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.
Saturday
 
Showers and possibly a thunderstorm. High near 71. South wind 11 to 18 mph, with gusts as high as 29 mph. Chance of precipitation is 80%. New rainfall amounts between a tenth and quarter of an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Saturday Night
 
Showers and possibly a thunderstorm before 11pm, then showers likely. Low around 41. Chance of precipitation is 80%. New precipitation amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.
Sunday
 
Mostly cloudy, with a high near 47. Breezy.
Sunday Night
 
Mostly cloudy, with a low around 37. Breezy.
Monday
 
Mostly sunny, with a high near 50.
Monday Night
 
A chance of showers between 8pm and 2am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 34. Chance of precipitation is 30%.
Tuesday
 
Mostly sunny, with a high near 42. Breezy.
Tuesday Night
 
Mostly clear, with a low around 30.
Wednesday
 
Sunny, with a high near 55.

 

Forecast from NOAA-NWS for 2 Miles N Lorain OH.

Weather Forecast Discussion
010
FXUS61 KCLE 021227
AFDCLE

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Cleveland OH
827 AM EDT Thu Apr 2 2026

.WHAT HAS CHANGED...
No changes to the general messaging. Monitoring for shower and storm
potential (along with accompanying severe weather/heavy rain risks)
late this afternoon/evening, late Friday afternoon/evening, and again
late Saturday into Saturday night.

&&

.KEY MESSAGES...
1) Scattered showers/thunder lift northeast across the area through
midday today, followed by a significant warming trend this
afternoon. Additional shower/thunder potential moves in from the
west late today and tonight, with a minimal severe weather risk.

2) Continued shower and thunder potential Friday and Friday night as
a front pushes into the area and then stalls on Friday, before
lifting north into Saturday. Some uncertainty exists regarding the
placement of the stalled front and favored location for shower and
storm potential late Friday into Friday night. Locally heavy rainfall
may accompany some storms.

3) A strong cold front sweeps through late Saturday and Saturday
night. A band of showers/storms with at least a low severe weather
and heavy rain risk likely accompanies the front, with warm and
breezy conditions continuing ahead of it.

4) Much cooler and generally low impact weather is expected from
Sunday through the first half of next week.

&&

.DISCUSSION...
KEY MESSAGE #1:

Scattered showers and perhaps a bit of thunder will lift east-
northeast across the area through about midday along and ahead of a
warm front. Not expecting any severe weather or a substantial enough
amount of rain to re-aggravate any ongoing flooding. Some patchy
dense fog is developing early this morning, and may not completely
until the front clears a given location. It will remain chilly ahead
of the front, with temperatures quickly surging this afternoon once
the front lifts through. Outside of perhaps Erie, much of the area
will push well into the 70s today. Parts of North Central and
Northeast OH, which should see the strongest warming this afternoon,
will push into the upper 70s to close to 80. With dew points in the
upper 50s/lower 60s behind the warm front, it will feel warm and
humid for early April. Wind gusts of 25-35 MPH are likely this
afternoon and early evening, especially west of I-77.

There will be renewed convective potential later this afternoon
through tonight ahead of a cold front approaching from the west.
Some guidance suggests loosely organized showers/storms firing from
eastern OH into PA late this afternoon or evening, likely along the
leading edge of a surge of higher theta-e air. Sufficient instability
and deep-layer shear are expected for a marginal wind/hail threat
with convection in our eastern counties late today or this evening,
though confidence in this convection occurring is low-medium in such
a weakly forced regime.

Attention then turns to the west ahead of an approaching cold front
this evening through tonight. Showers/storms are expected to develop
and organize well to our west this afternoon, with whatever is left
of the activity pushing into our area this evening and tonight. The
environment is supportive of organized convection and severe
potential to our west this afternoon and early evening. Decreasing
instability overnight, the surface front not even approaching Toledo
until Friday morning, and greater large scale forcing only grazing
us (stronger forcing stays to our west/northwest) all argue against
robust convection spreading across our area. While a Marginal Risk
(level 1 of 5) for severe weather from the SPC does get into our
Northwest OH counties with damaging winds and perhaps a brief tornado
possible, this should be a lower-end threat for our area and should
not carry well east overnight. In fact, confidence in substantial
rain occurring decreases east across the area overnight tonight. The
main window for any severe weather in our Northwest OH counties
appears to be between 8 PM and Midnight. While the area can not take
much rain at the moment, area-average QPF tonight is under a quarter-
inch with guidance suggesting localized peak amounts will remain
under an inch. This suggests we should not re-new flooding issues
through tonight. It will be quite mild tonight with lows in the 60s.

KEY MESSAGE #2:

The cold front that approaches tonight should push into at least
Northwest OH and over Lake Erie Friday morning, though will be losing
momentum as low-mid level heights begin rising behind the shortwave
that tracks through the Great Lakes tonight. The front will likely
push into and then stall across northern Ohio on Friday, remain
nearly stationary Friday night as increasing south-southwest flow
south of the front tries to counteract a push of cooler air from the
north, and then start lifting back north by early Saturday.

Some lingering showers may be ongoing from eastern OH into PA Friday
morning, with a general minimum in rain potential otherwise expected
Friday morning. The forecast for Friday afternoon-night is
deceptively tricky. It will remain warm and humid with potential for
showers and storms along and south of the front, with cooler and
drier weather north of the front. Some models stall the front over
far northern portions of the area, which makes sense given the height
rises that will be ongoing on Friday...however, other models show
the front continuing to move through before stalling across our
southern counties towards Route 30 Friday evening. Gut feeling is
that the front will stall farther north given the height rises, but
if we do see a greater push of north-northeast winds off the lake the
height rises may not matter as that would push the front south.

Where this becomes critical is in evaluating shower and storm
potential Friday afternoon through Friday night. Models that are
more progressive with the front, such as the HRRR/ARW/RRFS, have more
limited shower and storm potential that is focused across our
southern and southeastern counties Friday afternoon into Friday
night. Models that stall the front farther north, such as the
NAM/RGEM/ECMWF, are more generally aggressive/widespread with shower
and storm potential late Friday afternoon through Friday night. Even
with weak forcing, am expecting the warm/humid and uncapped airmass
to allow convection to start developing Friday afternoon. Activity is
likely to continue through the night as the front becomes better-
defined and as a modest southwesterly low-level jet develops. Again
though, exact placement and coverage are question marks. The
environment (weak to moderate instability with about 30kt of deep-
layer shear) can support a marginal wind/hail risk with more robust
storms Friday afternoon/early evening, covered by an SPC Marginal
Risk (level 1/5) for a good portion of our area. Instability profiles
get skinny Friday night with precipitable water values climbing over
1.25" (well above 90th percentile of climatology for this time of
year), supporting increasingly efficient rain rates within any
convection. The stalled/tightening front should continue to act as a
trigger for convection through much of Friday night, with the warm
and moist southwesterly low-level jet perhaps allowing for localized
back-building and training. So, if we do end up seeing greater
coverage of convection, flooding/flash flooding can become a greater
concern on top of soils that will still be fairly saturated.

With the slower front, much of the area should push well into the 70s
on Friday with dew points remaining in the low-mid 60s ahead of the
front. Locations near the lakeshore may be in for a sudden
temperature drop when/if the front pushes onshore off the lake Friday
afternoon or early evening, with noted uncertainty regarding the
timing and southward push of the front.

KEY MESSAGE #3:

A much deeper trough pushes into the Great Lakes Saturday and Sunday,
driving stronger low pressure through the region. The approach of
this stronger system will lift the front well north as a warm front
into early Saturday. As the trough digs it will push a much stronger
cold front across the area late Saturday or Saturday night.

We should briefly break into a mainly dry warm sector on Saturday,
after perhaps some lingering showers/storms near the warm front
across our northern counties early in the day. It will be warm and
breezy on Saturday, with highs again well into the 70s with an 80
degree reading not ruled out if we see enough dry time/sun. There is
high confidence in a band of rain/storms moving in along and just
behind the front late Saturday and Saturday night.

While forcing will be strong, especially Saturday night, somewhat
meager/skinny instability profiles to go along with the stronger
deep-layer shear being displaced behind the front could limit severe
potential. A narrow overlap of more favorable shear and some
instability may play out near the front, especially Saturday night as
forcing and flow aloft maximize over our area. Given that, the SPC
has outlined much of our area in a Marginal Risk (level 1 of 5) for
severe weather for later Saturday through Saturday night. It`s worth
noting that given increasing forcing at night, the setting of the sun
will not make as large of a difference with severe potential.
Overall, feel this is a lower-end threat for locally damaging winds
as things currently stand. While forcing increases Saturday night the
front will keep moving, with average QPF values generally in the
0.30-0.70" range (highest east) and locally up to 1" or so possible
in more robust convection. The amount of rain on its own is not that
concerning from a flooding perspective, though the rain with the
cold front Saturday night could worsen any still ongoing flooding.

KEY MESSAGE #4:

A period of much cooler weather with lighter precipitation chances
settles in Sunday through the first half of next week. A few showers
may linger on Sunday. A re-enforcing shortwave and cold front are
expected Monday into Monday night, with 850mb temperatures
potentially dipping to -10C on Tuesday. Strong high pressure moves
overhead Tuesday night before shifting east on Wednesday.

Scattered showers may accompany the cold front Monday afternoon into
Monday night area-wide, with greater potential southeast of Lake
Erie. Minor lake effect may linger into Tuesday before high pressure
has a chance to really build in. Showers during the day Monday will
largely fall as rain, though it will be cold enough aloft that
showers can have a bit of a convective flavor and produce some
graupel or very small hail (not sleet). Lingering lake effect behind
the front late Monday night into Tuesday would likely fall as mainly
snow...though the cold airmass is not deep or moist enough for a
noteworthy amount of lake effect snow, meaning light accumulations at
most. Unfortunately, the POPs outside of areas downwind of Lake Erie
are too low to get a forecast mention in our point and click or zone
forecast products Monday afternoon and evening, and we do not
directly control those extended grids at the WFO level anymore.

Highs will return to the 40s and 50s Sunday through Wednesday, with
overnight lows mainly in the 30s...and likely 20s Tuesday night
across much of the area with high pressure overhead.

&&

.AVIATION /12Z Thursday THROUGH Monday/...
IFR and low IFR conditions are in place to start the forecast
with patchy fog across central and northeast Ohio. Fog is
starting to improve as a band of showers lifts north. The
showers are associated with a warm front that will lift north of
the area this morning allowing for conditions to improve through
18Z with primarily VFR after that time. Winds will veer from
east northeast to southerly today with winds gusting to between
20 to 30 knots this afternoon and occasionally into tonight.
Surface winds may drop off for a period of time this evening, so
have a brief window of low level wind shear in the TAFs. Later
tonight there is potential for scattered showers and isolated
thunderstorms to sweep west to east. Have added low chances for
showers in several terminals and will need to update timing as
confidence increases.

Outlook...Additional periods of non-VFR conditions possible in
showers and thunderstorms late tonight into Friday. Non-VFR
possible Friday through Saturday night with rain and low
ceilings with low ceiling continuing through Sunday.

&&

.MARINE...
A Small Craft Advisory remains in effect for all nearshore waters
except towards Maumee Bay for 3 to 5 foot waves with northeast winds
of 15 to 20 knots through the morning. After that, a warm front will
lift north across Lake Erie and winds will shift around to the south
at 15-20 knots by tonight. The front will oscillate north and south
across Lake Erie through Saturday before a stronger cold front
finally pushes east across Lake Erie Saturday night Saturday night
into Sunday. This will be accompanied by west winds of 15 to 25
knots and waves building to 4 to 6 feet in the nearshore waters east
of Vermilion. Small Craft Advisories will likely be needed behind
the front on Sunday. Conditions improve Monday as high pressure
builds into the Ohio Valley.

&&

.CLE WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
OH...None.
PA...None.
MARINE...Small Craft Advisory until 1 PM EDT this afternoon for
     LEZ143>149.

&&

$$

DISCUSSION...Sullivan
AVIATION...10
MARINE...Kahn
View a Different U.S. Forecast Discussion Location
(In alphabetical order by state)



Forecast Discussion from: NOAA-NWS Script developed by: El Dorado Weather






Contact Us Contact Us Thumbnail | Mobile Mobile Phone Thumbnail
Private Policy | Terms & Conds | Consent Preferences | Cookie Policy
Never base any life decisions on weather information from this site or anywhere over the Internet.
Site is dedicated to our Lord & Savior Jesus Christ | Random Quotes of Jesus

Copyright © 2026 El Dorado Weather, Inc. | Site Designed By:  Webmaster Danny