Close Menu
  • Home
  • Local News
  • Entertainment
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • The Man Behind Saint Bread, the Wayland Mill, and Tivoli
  • Caitlyn Jenner claims late friend Sophia Hutchins owed her over $600K – National
  • Greece To Ban Social Media For Under-15s From 2027
  • Grown-Ups Are Going to Ballet Class
  • Black Ice Cream Truck Owner Targeted in NC
  • Tour Detours at the Biggest Alaskan Cruise Ports
  • Is Trump Having White House Easter Egg Roll Amid Walter Reed Rumors? – Hollywood Life
  • Seattle Struggles Among 2026 James Beard Awards Finalists
X (Twitter)
seattlenewseattlenew
  • Home
  • Local News
  • Entertainment
seattlenewseattlenew
“You are here:” Home | Local News | Why Seattle’s Weather Forecasts Are Difficult
Local News

Why Seattle’s Weather Forecasts Are Difficult

By n70productsFebruary 26, 2026No Comments
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
Why Seattle’s Weather Forecasts Are Difficult
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


forecast seattle washington ipakni

You check the weather report and it says it’s raining in Seattle. Or sunny in Seattle. Or something in Seattle—but not the something you see outside the window. You get hyped for snowstorms that never happen. You lose sunglasses because the sun never came out when it was supposed to. Why? Because Seattle weather is difficult, for many reasons. Not just difficult to live in, but difficult to predict.

The trouble starts with the definition of “Seattle.” Since 1948, the official climate reporting site for the city of Seattle has actually been located outside the city limits, at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport—12 miles south of downtown. At the time, there was a really good reason for recording the weather there.

“Planes need really precise weather information to land safely,” says Logan Johnson, meteorologist in charge at the National Weather Service’s Seattle office. But those 12 miles make a big difference. 

Downtown Seattle receives about 10 percent less rainfall than Sea-Tac Airport each year due to the placement of the Olympic Mountains, which partially shield the city from storms rolling in off the Pacific; the rain shadow difference in precipitation increases the further north and west one travels from the airport. 

It’s not unusual for areas south of I-90 to get around twice as much rain as their northern neighbors on particularly stormy days. Which means that “Seattle” can record historically rainy days even as the drizzle at the NWS office in Sand Point is nothing extraordinary. (They do measure there, too.)

And the airport’s automated recording equipment, called ASOS, is in a particularly brutal spot, sitting between two of the hot concrete runways at Sea-Tac with no vegetation nearby. On summer days, afternoon temperatures are typically 3 to 4 degrees warmer than those, say, near the Space Needle. The airport is also at 432 feet of elevation, much higher than downtown. As a result, the official Seattle statistics can make it look like a hotter, snowier, wetter, and generally more extreme place than it really is.

But the airport measuring system—common across the country—isn’t totally why it’s so hard to define what Seattle weather really is.

“We have a super complex terrain here. And this is what’s very different from almost anywhere else in the United States,” says Johnson. Seattle isn’t like the Midwest, where a whole city is at the same elevation; Western Washington’s terrain goes from sea level to 14,400 feet at the top of Rainier in just a few dozen miles. In between, there are a million different hills, dips, and shorelines.

“We have a super complex terrain here. And
this is what’s very different from almost anywhere
else in the United States.” —Logan Johnson

It can be snowing on the top of Queen Anne Hill while it rains at Lumen Field; even with the finest-tuned weather modeling, says Johnson, it can be impossible to tell whether a commute is going to be a blizzard or a deluge. “It’s a very small error that creates a tremendous difference in impacts.”

One of the more famous examples of this is the Puget Sound Convergence Zone—a narrow area of clouds and precipitation that typically picks on areas from downtown Seattle north to Everett. During the spring and summer, this can actually make the northern half of Seattle wetter than the airport—and snowier in the winter.

But the accuracy of weather forecasting has improved, notably when NWS models have been updated, says Johnson. At the turn of the century, meteorologists could predict tomorrow pretty well, while 25 years later five-day forecasts are fairly reliable. A new AI model was launched in December, but it’s not like the experts are asking ChatGPT if it’s going to rain; the AI version is built on the same traditional global forecast system, which isn’t going away. 

Maybe someday we will have individualized forecasts that can tell with certainty what is going to happen in every unique square inch of Seattle (and at Sea-Tac)—but not quite yet. 

“We are trying to forecast something that is so fine-scale, the fact that we can even get remotely close to it is remarkable to me,” says Johnson. “I think sometimes people don’t realize we’re actually trying to forecast something that’s not fully predictable.”



Source link

Difficult Forecasts Seattles WEATHER
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
n70products
  • Website

Related Posts

The Man Behind Saint Bread, the Wayland Mill, and Tivoli

April 9, 2026

Grown-Ups Are Going to Ballet Class

April 7, 2026

Tour Detours at the Biggest Alaskan Cruise Ports

April 5, 2026
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Subscribe to News

Get the latest sports news from Seattlenew.

Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.
Loading
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
About Us

Welcome to Seattle New, your trusted source for the latest news and events in the vibrant city of Seattle. We are dedicated to bringing you accurate, timely, and comprehensive coverage of the stories that matter most to our community.

 

Quicklinks
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Terms and Conditions
Categories
  • Local News
  • Entertainment

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from Seattlenew.

Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.
Loading
Copyright 2024 Seattlenew Design By Prince Ayaan.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.