Skip to main content
Mostly Clear icon
52º

Cold front moves through Houston tonight!

Temperatures tumble Tuesday

Through 6am Tuesday (Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston - All rights reserved.)

Tonight’s Forecast:

HOUSTON – A dense fog advisory is in effect until 6am Tuesday. The fog will be thickest ahead of the cold front. Skies clear from north to south in the morning. The thickest fog that may impact your early ride to work will be south of I-10. A cold front moves through overnight. Temperatures fall from the 60s to the 50s Tuesday morning.

Recommended Videos



Breezy and chilly behind cold front

Locations north and west of Houston will feel impacts from the front first, which is why temperatures there will plunge into the upper-40s. Houston will drop to the mid-50s.

Tuesday Morning (Copyright 2024 KPRC)

Tuesday’s Forecast:

Patchy fog will be possible for areas closer to the coast Tuesday morning. Otherwise it will be a mix of sun and clouds with highs in the lower-60s. We will have a chilly north wind 10-20 mph with gusts up to 30 mph.

Tuesday Afternoon (Copyright 2024 KPRC)

Cold Wednesday Morning:

Our morning lows have been a rollercoaster: Monday we started in the upper 50s and 60s but by Wednesday we will be in the 30s! Make sure to wear your coats so that you’re prepared for the temperature change! Areas to the northwest will be flirting with the freezing line.

30s with some freezing temperatures possible (Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston - All rights reserved.)

10-day Forecast:

Rain chances return on Friday Afternoon. Showers are a little more likely Saturday, but we are not expecting anything heavy. It’ll likely just be light rain showers similar to what we saw last weekend (although slightly less miserable as we’ll be warmer).

What to expect through Thursday of next week (Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston - All rights reserved.)

About the Author
Anthony Yanez headshot

Chief meteorologist and recipient of the 2022 American Meteorological Society’s award for Excellence in Science Reporting by a Broadcast Meteorologist.

Loading...