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Sunday's Weather Outlook

November 8, 2025 at 02:46 PM EST
By WeatherBug Certified Digital Meteorologist, Fred Allen
Sunday's Weather Outlook
A battle between seasons will be found across the nation’s midsection and East to wrap up the weekend. Meanwhile, a sun-filled sky will pack oodles of warm weather for the West.

A complex storm system will begin to organize along the Eastern Seaboard during Sunday afternoon and evening. Rain and showers will spread from the eastern Ohio Valley to north of the Pennsylvania-Maryland border to New York and southern and central New England throughout the day. In the storm’s warm sector, showers and thunderstorms may blossom in advance of a cold front in spotty fashion from Pennsylvania to the Mid-Atlantic beaches and in northern and central Florida during the afternoon and evening. A few storms may pack gusty winds.

Meanwhile, unusually cold air for this time of year on the storm’s northern fringe will lead to a transition to snow, especially across the Lower and possibly the eastern Great Lakes. The potential exists for a plowable snow near the Great Lakes, especially near Lake Michigan and in northwestern Indiana where lake-enhanced bands will likely maneuver around. Two to 5 inches of snow will be possible locally by Sunday night. A wintry mix – primarily snow and sleet – could create slick travel in the taller terrain across Upstate New York and near the U.S.-Canada border.

Snowflakes will fly across the northern Great Lakes throughout the day, which could lead to a few slick spots from Ironwood to Marquette, Mich.

The nation’s midsection to the Pacific beaches will bask in plenty of sunshine, but there will be a large temperature dichotomy to close out the weekend.

A continuation of unseasonably warm weather will dominate west of the Rocky Front Range and from the Mid-Atlantic to the Sunshine State. Here, highs will range from the upper 50s to lower 60s in the taller terrain and farther north in Pennsylvania, to the 70s and 80s most everywhere else except for the typically warmer desert locales which will jump into the 90s.

Significantly colder, blustery weather will mean highs in the 20s, 30s, and 40s across much of the Plains and Mississippi Valley will feel even colder. Chilly 50s, 60s, and 70s will largely dominate the eastern slopes of the Rocky Front Range, southern Plains to Deep South, with 30s, 40s, and 50s controlling the Tennessee and Ohio valleys to northern New England.