Welcome to League City Texas weather. Your local source for current weather, forecasts, doppler radar, satellite and other weather related information. This site updates current League City weather every 15 seconds. Your comments and suggestions are appreciated.
For current weather and forecasts via your cell phone, please visit our new Cell Phone utility and bookmark this
National Weather Service Forecast Discussion
Related quick links> 5 Day Forecast, Local Advisories, Drought Monitor, UV Forecast, Air Quality Forecast
378
FXUS64 KHGX 271116
AFDHGX
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Houston/Galveston TX
516 AM CST Sat Dec 27 2025
...New AVIATION...
.KEY MESSAGES...
- Very warm and humid conditions will continue into the weekend
Overnight/morning fog remains possible across the area, but is
most likely at the coast.
- A strong cold front late Sunday night into Monday morning will
bring much colder conditions early next week, followed by a slow
warmup deeper into the week.
- Gale conditions look increasingly likely after the front late
Sunday night through Monday, particularly over the Gulf waters.
A Gale Watch has been issued for this time.
&&
.DISCUSSION...
Issued at 1158 PM CST Fri Dec 26 2025
Well, after what seemed like endless days of heat, humidity, and
fog (it wasn`t really, it just felt like it after a while), we are
not only able to see a change to the weather, but we`re also only
about 48 hours away from it! Until then, of course, we remain
stuck with especially the heat and humidity. Fog seems to have
loosened its grip on the region tonight thanks to winds turning
more south to southwesterly, but we likely won`t be rid of the fog
threat completely until a cold front arrives to scour out this
moisture.
And on Sunday night, a cold front we shall have! It looks to move
into the northernmost reaches of our forecast area late Sunday
evening - somewhere in the 9pm to midnight range - and make its
way towards the coast, reaching the Gulf after midnight. Strong
north winds should pick up in its wake, especially in lower
friction locations near the coast, and the more open area well
west of the Houston metro. It`s too early to get into parsing out
things for something like a wind advisory, but with the
probability of getting a sustained wind of 25 mph at some point on
Monday being nearly 100 percent on Gulf beaches and just north of
Matagorda Bay (roughly Jackson, Wharton, and Matagorda counties),
and 50 percent or greater probabilities reaching all the way up
the western third of the area to College Station and Caldwell, I
suspect we`ll need an advisory for at least a portion of the area
on Monday. If you have Christmas decorations that can be easily
blown away, well...Sunday is probably a really good time to take
them down, even if it is hot.
Of course, with a cold front and strong north winds, we`re bound
to see colder, drier air surging in. After a stretch of near
record heat, Sunday`s temps look to have in the ballpark of 30
degrees shaved off them. This is a mighty big change, but
also...worth noting that a lot of that is really chopping off a
lot of unseasonable heat. After that huge swing, we`ll wind up
roughly 5-10 degrees below average on Monday and Tuesday. A nice
chill, a bit nippier than typical, but nothing unreasonably cold.
I will put the same note of caution on this as I did yesterday,
however. Global models, not always the best at handling the
shallowest portions of post-frontal cold pools, and if there is a
direction in which the forecast may trend, I would guess that it
is down. As a result, we continue to hammer things out with our
neighboring offices to hedge lower than the NBM deterministic for
early week temperatures, and may need to adjust further.
Looking at things a little more probabilistically, confidence is
pretty high for freezing temps north of the Houston metro - above
60 percent, and way up north in Houston County, up around 90
percent for Monday and Tuesday night. On Monday night, things do
look to stay pretty hemmed in up there, though a low chance (20
percent or less) does creep down from College Station towards I-10
west of the metro. On Tuesday night, which has a chance to see
more ideal radiational cooling should the sky clear and winds die
down, the odds in this area creep up. The rural west north of I-10
has something more akin to 45-65 percent chances of freezing
temps, and 40 percent chances even creep into rural areas south of
I-10! So, to sum up - north of the Houston metro, very likely to
see a light freeze Monday and Tuesday night. West of the metro,
plus some of the northern suburbs of Houston, a medium to high
chance, particularly on Tuesday night. A low to medium chance even
exists in the rural coastal area southwest of the metro on Tuesday
night! Down here, while a low below 32 may not be the most likely
outcome, it wouldn`t be the biggest surprise in the world, either.
A bit of a blessing here is that all of this is happening without
a real strong upper trough blasting this arctic air down into
Texas. In fact, the ridge that`s kept us so warm actually does a
decent job of blunting this trough and keeping the coldest air
pinned up in the Upper Midwest. We *could* be even colder if
the upper pattern were a little different!
Speaking of that upper pattern, it settles into something zonal,
or weakly ridgy for the mid to late week, so we still expect
some fair weather with a slow, gradual warmup through the week.
Model guidance still points to some sort of weak upper shortwave
trough moving through towards the end of the week, so we may see
another chance for some showers then.
&&
.AVIATION...
(12Z TAF Issuance)
Issued at 516 AM CST Sat Dec 27 2025
Elevated winds overnight have prevented dense fog from developing,
but some patches of reduced visibilities will remain possible
through 15Z. As a result, low cloud ceilings are the main impact
with MVFR to LIFR ceilings across the region. Surprisingly enough
though, VFR conditions prevail along the coast and will likely
prevail through tonight. Elsewhere, ceilings will gradually lift
through the late morning hours with VFR conditions returning
across the area by 20Z. Southerly to south-southwesterly winds
around 10-15 kt with intermittent gusts around 20 kt will prevail
throughout the day. Another round of MVFR to IFR ceilings are
expected tonight into Sunday morning. Winds look to remain
elevated once again, so ceilings are expected to be the main
impact once again rather than fog.
Batiste
&&
.MARINE...
Issued at 1158 PM CST Fri Dec 26 2025
For the time being, the environment remains generally supportive
of sea fog development, though the south to southwest winds now in
place should make any fog development less widespread and more
transient. The peak time for fog will remain overnight into the
morning hours. While this is a welcome development for marine
interests, it`s worth noting the potential for fog will not be
fully over until a strong cold front pushes offshore late Sunday
night. Along with some scattered showers and an isolated
thunderstorm, there will be strong winds and building seas in its
wake through Monday.
Confidence continues to increase in gale conditions, particularly
on the Gulf waters, but potentially also the bays, so a Gale
Watch has been issued to cover the most likely window for gale
conditions Sunday night and Monday. The NBM probability of the
strongest winds and wind gusts reaching gale at any point on
Monday is virtually 100 percent on the Gulf, though it`s worth
mentioning that verifying this would only require one single wind
measurement. The probability of gale winds and gusts at a given
time are lower, topping out at 30 and 50 percent, respectively. Of
course, that can be misleadingly low because it requires a wind of
that speed at that exact time! But, taken together, there is
clearly a strong signal for gale conditions on the Gulf for 12-18
hours and I have every expectation the watch will eventually
become a warning on the Gulf with this much confidence. Indeed,
there is even a portion of the coastal Gulf waters with a low
(roughly 10 percent) chance of seeing a sustained storm force wind
at some point on Monday. This is not to say that storm conditions
are expected by any means - a 10 percent chance of one single
sustained wind that high does not a storm make - but does serve
to enhance the confidence in gale conditions.
The potential for gales on the bays may not be quite as high, but
still justifies a need for a watch at this time. On the bays, the
potential for gale winds at a specific time tops out Monday
morning at 30-40 percent for gusts, and 20-25 percent for
sustained. But again, that requires gales at that specific time!
Taking the broader view of a gale force wind at any point on
Monday, and those probabilities exceed 85 percent for gusts and 60
percent for sustained winds, with better odds on Matagorda Bay
than Galveston Bay. With the thinking that a somewhat fuzzy view
of "A Gale" is something of a blend of those two outcomes, it
surely seems we meet the threshold of "about as likely as not" to
justify a watch. Even if the data ultimately supports only a small
craft advisory over a gale warning, conditions on the bays will
likely be near that gale threshold.
&&
.PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS...
College Station (CLL) 82 66 81 41 / 0 0 0 30
Houston (IAH) 82 66 83 47 / 0 0 0 50
Galveston (GLS) 74 66 74 50 / 0 0 10 60
&&
.HGX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
TX...None.
GM...Dense Fog Advisory until 10 AM CST this morning for GMZ330.
Gale Watch from late Sunday night through Monday afternoon for
GMZ330-335-350-355-370-375.
&&
$$
DISCUSSION...Luchs
AVIATION...Batiste
MARINE...Luchs
NWS HGX Office Area Forecast Discussion