St. Cloud, MN Weather Forecast
Tuesday, June 23, 2026 3:00 AM
Prepared by Bob Weisman, SCSU Meteorologist and Professor Emeritus
Rain Potential Today, Storms Possible At Times During Festivals
Again a List of the Local Festivals Next 2-3 Weeks
For the next 15 days, central Minnesota will be caught up in major celebrations. This includes St. Cloud's Granite City Days (including the SCSU Lemonade Art Fair), the Sauk Rapids Rapids River Fest, the Morrison County Fair in Little Falls, and the Willmar Fests. And, that doesn't even count the Special Olympics.
The following weekend, we have the 250th Independence Day nationally with numerous local celebrations. And St. Joseph will celebrate its Joetown Days. So, the weather for outdoor celebrations will be crucial over the next two extended weekends.
Thunderstorms Likely Today, Especially Second Half of the Day
The most certain threat of storms will come today. The slow-moving low pressure system has pushed into southern Saskatchewan overnight (counterclockwise rotating clouds on the College of DuPage North America clean infrared satellite loop) with the leading showers and thunderstorms in the Dakota (see College of DuPage north central US radar loop). These storms appear to be on track to mainly miss central Minnesota by daybreak (North Dakota storms moving into Canada, South Dakota storms headed for Nebraska and Iowa), but there will be a chance of a few scattered showers this morning.
The best chance for showers and thunderstorms will be this afternoon as new storms develop in the eastern Dakotas and push through Minnesota. The persistent clouds will likely keep high temperatures to the lower half of the 70's, a few degrees cooler than the past couple of days
Still, the approach of the upper-air low will mean some chilly temperatures in the middle atmosphere, so there will be a modest severe weather threat is modest (category 1 of 5) for large hail or straight-line damaging winds. The most important part will be the potential for widespread significant rainfall (more than half an inch shown on Day 1 of the NWS WPC quantitative precipitation forecast).
Lingering PM Showers Wednesday and Perhaps Thursday
After today, drier air will move in, but the cold pocket of air aloft will be near the Minnesota-Ontario border tomorrow and in western Ontario on Thursday. That will mean a lot of midday and afternoon puffy clouds and a few scattered showers and perhaps a thunderstorm each afternoon. I have a 40 chance for some brief rain showers on Wednesday with only the chance for a brief sprinkle on Thursday. So, the festival plans should mostly go on Thursday.
Summerlike Heat and Humidity to Cause Uncertain Storm Chances Late Week and Weekend
The weather pattern change is still expected for the weekend. The storm just to the south of Alaska (see Pacific mid-troposphere water vapor loop from Colorado State satellite slider) will push into the West Coast by the end of the week and move into the Intermountain States over the weekend. That will shift our west-to-east storm track just to the north of the Canadian border to a much more southwest-to-northeast direction. This will allow the intense heat from the Southwest to Texas (see NWS Heat Risk) to push well northward into the Plains and Ohio Valley by the weekend.
In Minnesota, this means more summerlike heat and humidity moving into the state by the weekend. It also means a good chance for showers and thunderstorms as the leading edge of the hot and humid air tries to replace the September-ish temperatures we've had throughout mid-June. Unfortunately, this means an iffy forecast for festival weekend activities. I have a first chance for showers and thunderstorms on Friday.
Because the push of the hot air is different in the various computer forecasts, there will be an uncertain chance for showers and thunderstorms (see Days 4-7 on the NWS WPC quantitative precipitation forecast). In these warm front situations, the most likely time for showers and thunderstorms would be overnight into the next morning, but I have no confidence about which night would have the best chance, and whether the better chance for storms would tend to be in northern Minnesota or northward or affect the rest of Minnesota. The more humid air available means there could be more severe weather in these storms.The chance for us to be in the hottest air is better for Sunday than for Saturday (red heat risk area in parts of southern Minnesota on Monday, Day 7 of the NWS Heat Risk forecast), but long-range forecasts of heat can easily be messed up by showers and thunderstorms.
Temporary relief from the heat and humidity would come when the Alaskan low pushes into Manitoba sometime during the first half of next week. However, having it forecast so far to the north means there would only be modest relief from the heat and lingering uncomfortable humidity. But, it's much too early to pin that down.
Detailed St. Cloud, MN, and Vicinity Forecast
Confidence Level (high): "The Bugs Are Waiting for Me to Mow the Lawn"
Tuesday 6/23/2026: Clouding up with showers and thunderstorms likely, especially midday and afternoon. Perhaps some hail or damaging winds. Uncomfortably humid. High: between 70 and 75. Winds: S-SE 5-15 MPH. Chance of measurable rainfall: 80%.
Tuesday Night: Showers and thunderstorms ending during the evening, then partial clearing late at night with a chance for patchy dense fog. Low: between 55 and 60. Winds: S-SW 5-15 MPH evening, 5 MPH late. Chance of measurable rainfall: 40%.
Wednesday 6/24/2026: A sunny start, then mixed clouds and sun midday and afternoon with a few scattered showers and thunderstorms. High: between 72 and 77. Winds: SW 5-15 MPH morning, NW 10-20 MPH afternoon. Chance of measurable rainfall: 40%.
Wednesday Night: Any showers ending early, then partial clearing. Some late night fog. Cooler. Low: between 52 and 57. Winds: NE 5 MPH. Chance of measurable rainfall: 30% before sunset, 10% rest of the night.
Thursday 6/25/2026: Sunny during the morning, partly sunny with perhaps a sprinkle during the afternoon, and continued a bit cooler than average. High: between 72 and 77. Winds: NE 8-15 MPH. Chance of measurable rainfall: 20%.
Confidence Level (medium): "Extra Bugs Will Come from Every House on My Block to Make a Cloud Around My Head"
Thursday Night: Clear to partly cloudy with a bit of a breeze. Low: between 52 and 57. Winds: NE 5-10 MPH. Chance of measurable rainfall: 10%.
Confidence Level (low): "Enough Bugs Will Fly into My Mouth to Throw Off My Diet"
Friday 6/26/2026: Mixed clouds and sun. A chance for a shower. High: between 70 and 75. Winds: SE 8-15 MPH. Chance of measurable rainfall: 30%.
Friday Night: Mostly cloudy with perhaps an early evening shower. Noticeably humid. Low: between 57 and 62. Winds: E 5-10 MPH. Chance of measurable rainfall: 20%.
Saturday 6/27/2026: Mixed clouds and sun, warmer, and becoming uncomfortably humid. A slight chance for a shower. High: between 77 and 82. Winds: SE 10-20 MPH. Chance of measurable rainfall: 20%.
Extended: Finally more summerlike temperatures (80's, perhaps 90's?) and humidity Sunday into early next week?? Uncertain shower and thunderstorm chances???
Forecast Confidence (10 – "The Rabbits Will Thump Even Though I Fed Them"; 0 – "The Rabbits Will Offer To Groom My Bald Spot"): 7 Tuesday through Wednesday night, 6 Thursday, 5 Thursday night, 3 Friday and Friday night, 2 Saturday, 1 Sunday and Monday.
Yesterday's High: 77°F; Overnight Low (through 2 AM Tuesday): 59°F;
St. Cloud Airport last 24-Hour Precipitation (through 2 AM Tuesday): None; SCSU 24-Hour Precipitation (through 2 AM Tuesday): None
| Temperature Category | High | Low |
|---|---|---|
| 80°F | 57°F | |
| 98°F (2005) | 76°F (2005) | |
| 60°F (1996) | 42°F (1958,1972) |
Next Update: Wednesday, June 24, 2026 6 AM
Links
- Full UCAR surface chart menu
- NWS Minnesota Hourly Weather Round-Up
- NWS: Last 72 hours of St. Cloud Observations
- MesoWest: Last 24 hours of St. Cloud Observations
- Full NWS Aviation Center Zoom-In Map
- Full College of DuPage surface map menu
- NWS WPC Latest North American zoom-in surface map
- NWS WPC surface map menu
- NWS WPC Short-Range forecast map
- NWS WPC 0-7 day forecast map loop
- US Air and Sports Net MN Wind Chill map
- NWS NOHRSC Snow Analyses
- US Watch/Warning Map from National Weather Service
- NWS Twin Cities Regional watch warning map
- Today's NWS Storm Prediction Center severe weather outlook
- Active Tropical Cyclones in eastern Pacific and Atlantic from NWS Tropical Prediction Center
- Potential Flooding Areas from the NWS Weather Prediction Center
- Air Quality Index from the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency
- NWS Weather Safety Page
- CDC Natural Disaster and Severe Weather Safety
- NWS Hot Weather and Sun/Ultraviolet Safety
- NWS Winter Storm Safety
- NWS Cold Weather Safety
- Yesterday's Storm Prediction Center severe weather reports are here
- NWS Hurricane Safety Page
- NWS Tropical Prediction Center overview of storm surge (coastal flooding)
- Minnesota MPCA hourly Air Quality Index
- Minnesota DNR Wildfire danger
- US Average Weather Related Deaths from NWS
- College of DuPage radar
- Airline Flight Delays and Cancellations from FlightAware.com
- Yesterday's Saint Cloud Climate Summary
- St. Cloud Weather Summaries by month
- Minnesota State Climatology Office weekly growing season rainfall maps
- Minnesota State Climatology Office create your own precipitation table
- NWS Create Your Own Rainfall Map
- Daily High/Low/Precip/Snowfall by Month (1997-current)
- National Weather Service Saint Cloud Daily Weather Site
- Saint Cloud Daily Normals, Records, and Extremes
- Bob Weisman's Ultimate Saint Cloud Climate Page
- St. Cloud Growing Season Rainfall and Departure from normal (at the bottom of this forecast each day)
- National Drought Mitigation Center's US Drought Monitor (updated on Thursdays)
- DNR Waters Streamflow Report (updated on Mondays)
- NWS Create Your Own Rainfall Map
- More Drought Links (from the State Climatology Office, Minnesota DNR)
- DNR Forestry/Fire Conditions page
Comments
Let me know what you think about this forecast and discussion by emailing SCSU meteorology professor Bob Weisman. Please note that I make the forecast, not the weather!
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