Boulder should see highs in the 40s today with mostly cloudy skies, according to the National Weather Service.
The following Colorado snow totals have been reported by the National Weather Service for Jan. 30, 2025 as of 11 a.m. Monday: RELATED: Everything you need to know about the polar vortex bringing extreme cold to Colorado 11-mile Canyon Re, CO — 2 inches at 7 a.m.
Snow falling across central and southern Colorado will continue through Thursday afternoon, according to the National Weather Service. The heaviest snow will fall across southeastern Colorado, including the Palmer Divide and plains east of metro Denver,
Today’s forecast calls for cloudy skies with a high of 50 and an overnight low of 9, with a 40% chance of snow after 4 p.m. New snow accumulation of less than an inch is possible during the day. Between 4 and 8 inches of new snow accumulation is possible overnight. Snow may be heavy at times.
Here are the lowest temperatures across Colorado on Tuesday morning, according to the National Weather Service.
The winter storm, which is expected to hit southeastern Colorado the hardest on Thursday, could drop more than a foot of snow in the mountains and up to 6 inches south of metro Denver, forecasters said.
Here are the lowest temperatures across Colorado on Monday morning, according to the National Weather Service.
Part of Highway 93 is closed on Tuesday afternoon as winter weather blows through the area south of Boulder, near Eldorado Springs.
Here is what is and isn't a polar vortex when Colorado receives cold like what is forecast for the holiday weekend.
DENVER (KDVR) — More cold temperatures are in Denver’s weather forecast ahead of the chance for weekend snow. Tuesday night will stay breezy with wind gusts reaching 20-30 mph in the metro, and over 50 mph at times in the foothills. Temperatures will be cold as clouds continue to clear, dropping to the teens.
High winds are typically associated with winter storms, hurricanes or severe thunderstorms. But on the morning of Jan. 17, 1982, 43 years ago, a fierce windstorm hammered the Front Range of Colorado with gusts you might associate with a mountain top or within the eyewall of a hurricane.
Another weekend, another storm with this latest one zeroing in on the northern I-25 corridor, foothills and mountains, which could see a foot of snow.