Vail
Stoke today Jun 13
Snow, three ways next 24 hours
Forecast
0″
model consensus
Station
0.0″
Vail Mountain SNOTEL · 4.2 km · depth 0.0″
Resort
—
resorts aren’t reporting (offseason)
Next 48 hours
10-day outlook
In the forecaster’s words
Tonight
Mostly clear, with a low around 43. Southeast wind around 0 mph.
Overnight
Mostly clear, with a low around 43. Southeast wind around 0 mph.
Overnight
Clear, with a low around 43. East wind around 0 mph.
Overnight
Clear, with a low around 43. East southeast wind around 0 mph.
Saturday
Sunny, with a high near 80. West northwest wind 0 to 10 mph, with gusts as high as 25 mph.
Today
Sunny, with a high near 80. West wind 0 to 10 mph, with gusts as high as 25 mph.
Forecast discussion BOU · Jun 13 05:49
- Elevated to near critical fire weather conditions possible today across the high country. - Cooler temperatures today and Sunday behind a cold front. - The best chances for showers/thunderstorms will be Sunday. - Temperatures heat back up next week.
Read the full discussion
000 FXUS65 KBOU 131149 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 549 AM MDT Sat Jun 13 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Elevated to near critical fire weather conditions possible today across the high country. - Cooler temperatures today and Sunday behind a cold front. - The best chances for showers/thunderstorms will be Sunday. - Temperatures heat back up next week. && .DISCUSSION /Through Friday/... Issued at 215 AM MDT Sat Jun 13 2026 An early morning cold front will bring cooler temperatures to the forecast area today along with gusty northeasterly winds, and an increase in low-level moisture. Afternoon temperatures are forecast to warm into the upper 70s to low 80s across our lower elevations and mountain valleys. The increasing moisture will help suppress any critical fire weather conditions across the lower elevations, but with the moisture not expected to push into the higher elevations, we will still see some elevated fire weather conditions for our mountain valleys where relative humidities are still expected to drop into the low to mid teens this afternoon. A secondary surge of northeasterlies are expected later this afternoon that will enhance upslope flow and precipitation chances for the afternoon and evening. Precipitation will primarily be limited to our Central Mountains, southern foothills, and the Palmer Divide, where we could see a few weak thunderstorms and showers develop, with low chances of these holding together as they move off the higher terrain. With the persistent northeasterlies in place, we could see some smoke start to filter into the region from fires burning in eastern Wyoming and western Nebraska. The greatest concentrations look to make their way into the area late tonight/early Sunday morning, settling up against the Front Range and urban corridor by sunrise Sunday. Much cooler temps are expected Sunday behind today's cold front, with well-below normal high temps in the 60s forecast for the lower elevations. Ensembles show PWATs increasing to around 130-140% of normal for the Central Mountains and Palmer Divide where up to 500 J/kg of MLCAPE and a passing shortwave will provide enough support for some afternoon thunderstorms that will be our best shot for precipitation for the week. QPF will be greatest along the Palmer Divide where a few tenths will be possible with any storms that develop, with only a few hundredths possible elsewhere across the lower elevations. Temperatures will start to increase again on Monday as Colorado will be on the eastern side of a building upper-level ridge over the western CONUS. Ensembles show a significant decrease in PWATs through the forecast period and a steady increase to temperatures through midweek, where they are looking to peak on Wednesday before another cold front slides south across the area sometime Wednesday night. PoPs are minimal to nonexistent after Monday and with above normal temps expected, we will have to start monitoring for critical fire weather conditions developing as fuels start to dry out. && .AVIATION /12Z TAFS through 12Z Sunday/... Issued at 531 AM MDT Sat Jun 13 2026 Northerly winds have made it to KDEN/KBJC with gusts between 20-25kts just upstream that are still expected to push south into the TAF sites in the next hour or so. Winds are expected to maintain a north to northeasterly component through the remainder of the TAF period, with a secondary push/reinforcement of the NE winds expected between 21Z-23Z that will enhance winds with roughly 25-30kt winds possible along with some showers developing over the southern foothills and Palmer Divide that may make their way into the vicinity of all three TAF sites, though the best chances would be for KAPA/KBJC between 23Z to 2Z. CIGs are expected to start to lower with the showers, dropping down to around 5,000' to 6,000' AGL between 3Z to 6Z and continuing to drop to MVFR conditions through the early morning Sunday. Additionally, with a few wildfires burning to the north, smoke is expected to make its way into northeastern Colorado as the northeasterly winds persist. The HRRR vertically integrated smoke and mean near surface smoke show higher concentrations of smoke making it into KDEN/KBJC near sunrise Sunday morning. This could create some slant range visibility concerns in addition to the low ceilings. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ DISCUSSION...9 AVIATION...9
Sources & last updated
- Weather data: MET Norway, licensed under CC BY 4.0 fetched Jun 13 09:55
- Forecast data: National Weather Service (weather.gov) fetched Jun 13 09:55
- Weather data: Open-Meteo (open-meteo.com), CC BY 4.0. Underlying models from NOAA, ECMWF, DWD, ECCC, JMA, MET Norway. fetched Jun 13 09:55
- Snow station data: USDA NRCS SNOTEL (wcc.sc.egov.usda.gov) fetched Jun 13 09:35