270 FXUS61 KOKX 010234 AFDOKX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service New York NY 934 PM EST Sat Feb 28 2026 .WHAT HAS CHANGED... No significant changes from the previous forecast. && .KEY MESSAGES... 1) Areas of fog and black ice still possible for parts of the area tonight. 2) Snow showers expected on Sunday. 3) Multiple waves of low pressure will move through the area Tuesday through the start of next weekend. Expect a prolonged period of wet and mostly cloudy conditions with above normal temperatures. && .DISCUSSION... .KEY MESSAGE 1... MOS and time-lagged NAM/RAP guidance suggest greatest potential for fog will be across Long Island, NYC, and SW CT. for several hours from about 9-10 PM until 1-2 AM as a cold front moves through and a drying northerly flow in its wake scours out low level moisture. With the expected timing and temperatures, best potential for freezing fog would be across eastern Long Island. .KEY MESSAGE 2... No advisories are currently anticipated for snow or wind chills. Weak shortwave trough accompanied by some H8 theta-e advection and H7 frontogenesis will move through daytime Sunday, mainly during the morning and early afternoon. Have kept likely PoP which is above NBM and MOS guidance, and lowered accumulations slightly, with up to an inch well inland and more on the order of a dusting for the NYC metro and coastal sections. Precip should be exiting eastern Long Island/CT by late afternoon. the end of the day. Thermal profiles support snow as wet bulb temps should be at or below 32 for the duration of the event. Minor impacts expected for the most part. Colder air filters in from the north during Sunday night with low temps from the upper single digits well inland, to the teens elsewhere. Wind chills should bottom out around zero well inland and in the single digits elsewhere. Highs for Monday only from the mid 20s to lower 30s in most spots, and get to within 3 degrees of record low maxes for the date at Newark, JFK, and Islip. .KEY MESSAGE 3... The first chance of precipitation next week comes on Tuesday. As Arctic high pressure shifts to the east, a wave of low pressure looks to pass through. Because of the cold air in place Tuesday morning, this precipitation likely starts off as snow across the interior with a snow or rain/snow mix at the coast. We will quickly warm up so through the day the area will gradually transition to all plain rain. There are still some timing differences with just how early the precipitation will start and this will end up affecting p-types and any sort of accumulation. At this time, under an inch of snow expected. Even the NBM 4.3 and 5.0 90th percentiles for snow accum show less than an inch for much of the area with the exception of the Lower Hudson Valley where it shows a few inches of accumulation. Once the Arctic airmass shifts east, a warming trend will begin, with above normal temperatures expected by Wednesday. Timing and location differences with additional waves of low pressure continue in the latest guidance. While prolonged wet conditions are expected, the period will not be a washout by any means. There are chances of rain each day, but this is largely due to the spread in guidance. From Tuesday through Saturday the latest NBM has a total of about 0.75 to 1.00 inches of QPF. && .AVIATION /02Z SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/... A cold front moves through tonight. A wave of low pressure passes early tomorrow. High pressure builds in from the west late tomorrow into tomorrow night. Low confidence in fog/mist/low stratus development tonight. TEMPOs are in place for MVFR mist and low stratus between 3Z-7Z. Best chances for this are coastal terminals, particularly KJFK and KISP. Unscheduled amendments are possible. Light snow will bring conditions back to MVFR and possible IFR mid-morning through midday tomorrow, followed by a return to VFR conditions by the afternoon tomorrow. Winds have gone light and variable. They will become N 5-10 kt just before daybreak, then increase to 10-15 kt later in the morning. Following a wave of low pressure, winds will increase in magnitude tomorrow afternoon NNW 10-15 kt G17-22 kt. ...NY Metro (KEWR/KLGA/KJFK/KTEB) TAF Uncertainty... Low confidence in fog/mist/low stratus development tonight. TEMPOs are in place for MVFR mist and low stratus between 3Z-7Z. Best chances for this are coastal terminals, particularly KJFK and KISP. Unscheduled amendments are possible. Moderate/high confidence with the timing of the snow for Sunday, and a brief period of IFR visibilities. .OUTLOOK FOR 03Z MONDAY THROUGH THURSDAY... Sunday afternoon: Becoming VFR in the afternoon and evening. N/NW winds G15-20 kt. Monday: VFR. Tuesday: MVFR or lower with a rain/snow mix in the morning, becoming plain rain during the afternoon and into the evening south to north. S wind G15-20 kt possible. Wednesday - Thursday: MVFR, possibly IFR, with a chance of rain. Thursday S wind G15-20 kt possible. Detailed information, including hourly TAF wind component forecasts, can be found at: https:/www.weather.gov/zny/n90 && .MARINE... Sub-advisory conditions expected for the most part through Tuesday. Conditions may get close for a time on the ocean late Sunday night, with N flow gusting over 20 kt and seas up to 4 ft. Light freezing spray expected on the ocean waters Sunday night into Monday morning as well. There are several weak waves of low pressure that will pass through, with winds and seas on the ocean getting close to SCA criteria Tuesday night into Wednesday, and then again at the end of the week. && .OKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... CT...None. NY...None. NJ...None. MARINE...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Goodman/JT AVIATION...BR MARINE...Goodman/JT