Weather

How Much Snow Can VA Expect This Winter? See New AccuWeather Forecast

How much will it snow in Virginia this year? A new winter forecast locked in its prediction.

AccuWeather has released its 2024-25 winter forecast, calling for Virginia to have a mild start to the season before cold moves in for the holidays. But will it linger?
AccuWeather has released its 2024-25 winter forecast, calling for Virginia to have a mild start to the season before cold moves in for the holidays. But will it linger? (Peggy Bayard/Patch)

VIRGINIA — How cold and snow will the upcoming winter be in Virginia? A new AccuWeather 2024-25 winter forecast released this week predicts that residents in the central and southern areas of the country will experience an extended autumn, with warmer temperatures expected.

"December through February, the warmest areas of the country, compared to the average, are going to be from the South, central southern Plains states through the Mississippi Valley, up through the Ohio and Tennessee valleys," AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist and Long-Range Expert Paul Pastelok explained.

However, those living north and west of the Baltimore-Washington area will see lower temperatures and possibly receive more snow than last winter.

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“Most areas in the Northeast will receive more snow this season than last winter. An uptick in snow is also likely across parts of the Midwest, including Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan,” according to AccuWeather’s forecast.

The private weather company said in its forecast, released Monday, that winter will have some “meteorological twists and turns” that could bring bursts of heavy snow and blasts of bitterly cold air.

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Meteorological winter begins on Sunday, Dec. 1, and astronomical winter begins on Dec. 21, the date of the winter solstice and the shortest day of the year.

Most of Virginia, with the exception of the Hampton Roads area, will experience blasts of cold weather and the possiblity of snow in December. However, the cold weather will be short-lived, as a new weather pattern emerges at the beginning of 2025. This will result in milder temperatures across the state and less snow, according to AccuWeather’s forecast.

“La Niña will be weak for most of the winter,” AccuWeather senior meteorologist and long-range expert Paul Pastelok said. “A weaker La Niña can allow other signals to drive the pattern, more variability throughout the winter.”

February is the most probable month for the arrival of a polar vortex — a large area of cold, low-pressure air rotating counterclockwise around Earth’s poles that can expand in the winter and send cold air southward. However, there’s less certainty this year about when, or if, the extreme cold air will make it to the continental U.S.

Most areas in the Northeast and Midwest will see more snow this year than last, with predictions returning to near historical averages in cities such as Boston, New York City, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Chicago and Buffalo, New York.

Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan and other Midwest states could also see an uptick in snow. However, periods of snowy, cold weather could be broken up by the arrival of milder air from the Pacific flows across the country, beginning in early 2025, according to AccuWeather.

Winter is expected to feel like an extension of fall in the South, central southern Plains states, through the Mississippi Valley and up the Ohio and Tennessee valleys. When storms do arrive, they could bring a heightened risk of severe weather.

“You need to be aware of severe weather in the winter. We’ve seen in the past damaging thunderstorms in December, January, and February,” said Pastelok. “With mild air masses coming out of the west during the month of January, we could see the potential for severe weather farther north into places like Missouri, Arkansas, and Tennessee. As the jet stream dips farther south in February, we could start to see more severe weather in the Gulf coast states with warmer air and warmer waters from the Gulf of Mexico.”

Mild weather is expected to continue across parts of the West, with the frequency of rain (or snow in the Mountains) could increase in November and December

“I think skiing in the West is looking really good,” Pastelok said. “I think it’s going to get kick-started right for the holiday season.”

The ski season in the mountains of Southern California, northern Arizona and New Mexico could come to an early end, but conditions look good in the Pacific Northwest and central Rockies.

That’s what happened in the La Niña winter of 2022-23 when nearly 40 atmospheric rivers hit the western U.S., many of which impacted California.

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