Snow possible for Monday’s commute, National Weather Service says
The work week will begin with cold, snow, and sleet but should be otherwise sunny, dry, and gradually become warmer, according to the National Weather Service.
Rain forecast for the Greater Boston region overnight Sunday into Monday will eventually give way to light snow, with the potential of about three inches of accumulation, forecasters predict.
“Snow is likely with a chance of rain in the morning,” Alan Dunham, a meteorologist with the NWS, told the Herald. “It will finish off as snow showers in the mid-afternoon. Accumulation for Greater Boston could be about one to three inches.”
NWS radar models show snow clouds moving into the region from the north-west as of Sunday evening, and Dunham said there is potential for wintery-mix precipitation beginning overnight.
Here is a model depiction showing the approximate timing when portions of the region transition over from a mix to all snow tonight. Snow tapers off later on Monday. #mawx #ctwx #riwx pic.twitter.com/suc6Nfp17g
— NWS Boston (@NWSBoston) January 28, 2024
Temperatures will drop toward freezing before dawn on Monday, and that morning’s sunrise behind cloudy skies probably won’t warm the region out of the mid-30s. Snow showers are most likely between 1 p.m. and 3 p.m., according to the weather service.
The snow should drift off over the Atlantic by the end of Monday afternoon, when overnight temps will begin dropping toward the low-20s.
Temperatures on Tuesday aren’t expected to climb out of the 20s, despite a partly sunny forecast. Overnight lows will drop even further going into Wednesday, falling as low as the mid-teens.
The mercury should climb back above freezing and stay in the mid-30s during the day on Wednesday, Dunham said, when it is expected to be mostly sunny, though it will again drop into the 20s overnight.
More partly sunny weather is forecast for both Thursday and Friday, when the high temperature is expected to break into the low-40s and just-barely freezing temps are expected overnight.
The weekend appears dry at this point, Dunham said, with more partly sunny weather predicted and highs in the middle-30s.
Winds are expected to stay below 15 mph throughout most of the week, though there is potential for gusts as high as 26 mph during Monday’s snow storms, according to the weather service.