St. Cloud, MN Weather Forecast
Friday, July 3, 2026 4:00 AM
Prepared by Bob Weisman, SCSU Meteorologist and Professor Emeritus
Storm Threats Continue Today and Tomorrow
Storms Still Lining Up to Pass Minnesota Through Tomorrow Evening
Today and tomorrow, we will have a pair of low pressure systems move along the southern flank of the stalled low near the Manitoba-Ontario border. Today's system is moving from Montana into the Dakotas and tomorrow's system is the one passing the Pacific Northwest (see counterclockwise circulation centers on the College of DuPage North America mid-level water vapor loop).
Few Morning Showers in Central Minnesota
Today, we will have the early morning showers and thunderstorms (see College of DuPage north central US radar loop) push mainly through southern Minnesota with a few in central Minnesota.
Good Chance for Afternoon, Early Evening Storms in Southern Minnesota...
However, more storms will develop this afternoon along the southern edge of the morning clouds (see College of DuPage north central US clean infrared satellite loop). During the late day and evening hours, the strongest of those storms will be in southern Minnesota through Nebraska, southeastern South Dakota, and Iowa. Those areas will have the best chance for severe weather (threat category 3 of 5) with large hail and straight-line damaging winds the main threat. There will continue to be a threat of enough rain to produce flooding in southern Minnesota and Iowa (see Day 2 of the NWS WPC Excessive Rainfall Outlook), especially in the wake of the heavy rain from the past two days (see neon green flood warnings and dark green flood watches on the NWS Twin Cities watch-warning map).
Central MN: Scattered Late Day Thunderstorms, Better Chance Overnight
In central Minnesota, there will be the chance for some scattered afternoon showers and thunderstorms, but a better chance for showers and thunderstorms from the western low pushing across the Dakotas and into Minnesota. These storms will carry some threat of straight-line wind damage, but only a category 1 of 5 risk before tomorrow at daybreak.
We will have more clouds today as the leftover clouds from the storms to our south and west will hang around for at least this morning. That will keep highs in the lower 80's.
Still Good Chance for Both Morning and Afternoon Storms Tomorrow...Maybe Winding Down by Late Afternoon?
The Fourth of July will have the chance of showers and thunderstorms, both during the morning and again during the afternoon into the evening. The latest information favors the second round of storms in the afternoon, rather than the evening, so there will be a chance for fireworks to go on, if people are urged not to show up until later in the afternoon. The severe weather threat is lower due to the persistent cloud cover expected, but lightning and heavy downpours (see Day 3 of the NWS WPC Excessive Rainfall Outlook) could still be a problem.
There will be persistent clouds outside of the storm threats tomorrow, so highs will likely be held in the 70's. Still, the humidity will be uncomfortable.
Sunday the Better Weekend Day By Far
The second half of the weekend still looks better than the first half. Behind the Pacific Northwest storm, our winds will turn to the northeast, bringing either air from Ontario into Minnesota or rerouting air from the eastern slopes of Montana to Minnesota. That should allow dew points to fall back into the merely noticeable upper 50's with some fog possible on a clear, calm night (more likely early Monday than early Sunday). And, we should have much more sun on Sunday than on Saturday with highs back to around 80.
Perhaps Some Low-Level Smoke?
If the air flow comes from the area of Quebec along Hudson Bay, northern Manitoba, or southeastern Nunavut, there would be a chance that wildfire smoke could push into Minnesota (see EPA fire and smoke map) on Sunday or Monday.
Return of Highs in 80's, Uncertain Storm Chances Next Week
The most oppressive air is expected to get shoved to the Tennessee River Valley by early next week (see orange and red areas on the NWS Heat Risk forecast move further south and not as severe by Day 4; Monday and Tuesday). Minnesota will still be near the parade of storm systems moving from the eastern Pacific to the Great Lakes, so the humidity will return and there will be storm chances, which are too vague to pick days and time right now (computer forecasts like mid-week, but we'll see). Initially, the drier air at the ground will allow highs back into the 80's, but clouds from nearby storms will make heating more difficult as the week goes on (see Days 3-7 on the NWS WPC quantitative precipitation forecast)
Rain Is Still Badly Needed...
Despite the rain concentrating in southern Minnesota over the past few days (set NWS Water Prediction Center Minnesota rainfall map to yesterday's date, and last 7 days), much of Minnesota still needs rain quite badly (see updated National US Drought Monitor, including rain through Tuesday), so any rainfall the next two days will be important.
With Only Pockets of Minnesota Getting June Help
The June rainfall story was insufficient drought relief (set NWS Water Prediction Center Minnesota rainfall map to the month of June and set table to departure from average). While parts of central Minnesota from Wheaton to Hutchinson had above average rainfall (green and blue), large portions of Minnesota, including northern and even central Minnesota between Little Falls and the Twin Cities were near or below average (yellow). The St. Cloud Airport was near average (3.67 inches, average June rainfall 3.75 inches). I'll have more about June as I work on the monthly summary, including a weird temperature trend with the first 12 days being like mid-July and the following two weeks having temperatures resembling mid-September.
Detailed St. Cloud, MN, and Vicinity Forecast
Confidence Level (high): "The Bugs Are Waiting for Me to Mow the Lawn"
Friday 7/3/2026: Mixed clouds and sun, not quite as warm, but uncomfortably to oppressively humid. Perhaps an early storm, but a better chance for late day showers and thunderstorms. High: between 80 and 85. Winds: SE 8-15 MPH. Chance of measurable rainfall: 30% morning, 40% afternoon.
Confidence Level (medium): "Extra Bugs Will Come from Every House on My Block to Make a Cloud Around My Head"
Friday Night: Showers and thunderstorms likely. Severe weather and heavy rainfall possible. Low: between 60 and 65. Winds: S 8-15 MPH, becoming S near midnight, then shifting to SW early evening. Chance of measurable rainfall: 80%.
Saturday 7/4/2026: Lots of clouds with a chance of both morning and afternoon showers and thunderstorms. Not nearly as hot, but continued humid. High: between 75 and 80. Winds: SW 8-15 MPH, becoming NW 10-20 MPH during the afternoon. Chance of measurable rainfall: 70%.
Saturday Night: Perhaps some evening showers and thunderstorms, then partial clearing, and turning a bit less humid. Low: between 55 and 60. Winds: NE 5-15 MPH. Chance of measurable rainfall: 30% evening, 10% late night.
Sunday 7/5/2026: Sunny to partly cloudy, warm, and a bit less humid. High: between 77 and 82. Winds: NE 8-15 MPH. Chance of measurable rainfall: 10%.
Sunday Night: Mostly clear, breezy, with merely noticeable humidity. Areas of fog possible late. Low: between 55 and 60. Winds: E 5-10 MPH evening, light E late. Chance of measurable rainfall: 10%.
Monday 7/6/2026: Sunny to partly cloudy with uncomfortable humidity. A slight chance for a late day shower or thunderstorm. High: between 80 and 85. Winds: SE 5-15 MPH. Chance of measurable rainfall: 20%.
Confidence Level (low): "Enough Bugs Will Fly into My Mouth to Throw Off My Diet"
Monday Night: Partly clear, breezy, and uncomfortably humid. A chance of a shower or thunderstorm. Low: between 63 and 68. Winds: SE-S 5-10 MPH. Chance of measurable rainfall: 30%.
Tuesday 7/7/2026: Partly sunny, still warm, and humid. A chance for a shower or thunderstorm. High: between 83 and 88. Winds: SE 5-15 MPH. Chance of measurable rainfall: 30%.
Extended: Continued warm and uncomfortably humid through much of next week??? Uncertain potential for thunderstorms (better chance during the middle of next week) ???
Forecast Confidence (10 – "The Rabbits Will Thump Even Though I Fed Them"; 0 – "The Rabbits Will Offer To Groom My Bald Spot"): 6 Friday, 5 Friday night, 4 Saturday through Saturday night, 6 Sunday, 4 Sunday night and Monday, 2 Monday night and Tuesday, 1 Wednesday.
Yesterday's High: 85°F; Overnight Low (through 4 AM Friday): 66°F;
St. Cloud Airport last 24-Hour Precipitation (through 4 AM Friday): None; SCSU 24-Hour Precipitation (through 4 AM Friday): TBA
| Temperature Category | High | Low |
|---|---|---|
| 82°F | 59°F | |
| 102°F (1949) | 77°F (1949) | |
| 57°F (1927) | 45°F (1915,1967,1972) |
Next Update: Saturday, July 4, 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!
Learn Meteorology: Visit Our Department
Are you interested in studying meteorology? If so, go to the Atmospheric and Earth Sciences Department home page.