Technical NOAA Weather Discussion

FXUS66 KMTR 200554
AFDMTR

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service San Francisco CA
954 PM PST Thu Feb 19 2026

...New AVIATION, MARINE...

.KEY MESSAGES...
Updated at 223 PM PST Thu Feb 19 2026

 - Scattered showers and gusty winds continue through this 
   evening with a low potential for thunderstorms across the 
   Central Coast

 - Accumulating snow remains possible in the higher terrain of the
   Central Coast through tonight

 - Cold to very cold conditions are expected across the interior
   tonight and again Friday night

 - Hazardous beach conditions for Pacific Coast beaches through
   Friday morning

 - Brief dry out Friday into Saturday before unsettled conditions
   return late Saturday and continue into next week

&&

.SHORT TERM...
Issued at 223 PM PST Thu Feb 19 2026
(This evening through Friday)

Scattered showers continue across the region with a low potential (< 
15%) for thunderstorms across the South Bay and Central Coast. We 
have received one report of a thunderstorm in San Jose around 1230PM 
with small hail reported in south San Jose. Any thunderstorms or 
stronger cells that do develop may produce accumulating small hail, 
locally gusty winds, and moderate to heavy rain. High resolution 
RRFS guidance shows showers becoming more scattered and 
predominantly staying over the SF/San Mateo Peninsula, South Bay, 
and Central Coast through this evening. Showers look to continue 
over the Central Coast tonight, particularly along the Big Sur 
Coastline. Additional rainfall amounts are expected to be light with 
most areas seeing around 0.15-0.2" through this evening. The 
exception is the Santa Lucia Range where an additional 0.5" is 
possible. Winds will remain gusty between 30-40 mph through this 
afternoon before diminishing this evening into the overnight hours.

Much colder temperatures are on the books for tonight with 
widespread low temperatures in the low to mid 30s across the 
interior while the coast stays slightly warmer in the upper 30s to 
low 40s. The coldest portions of the interior Central Coast, East 
Bay Hills, and North Bay will drop into the upper 20s tonight. As 
such, a mix of Cold Weather Advisories and Extreme Cold Warnings 
have been issued for the majority of the region tonight. Extreme 
Cold Warnings are generally limited to the higher elevations and the 
North Bay Valleys while Cold Weather Advisories encompass portions 
of the Bay Area and Northern Salinas Valley. This cold will be 
impactful for anyone who does not have adequate access to heat, any 
pets left outdoors, and any plants sensitive to the cold. 
Temperatures will not be cold enough or prolonged enough for pipes 
to freeze during this cold snap. A few climate sites will come 
within 5 degrees of their daily record low temperatures for Friday. 
If we are able to have substantial clearing tonight, there may be 
enough radiational cooling to bring some of the climate sites closer 
to their record low temperatures. However, cloud cover would be the 
limiting factor with guidance mixed on clouds clearing overnight on 
the SF/San Mateo Peninsula, South Bay, and Central Coast. Conditions 
look more favorable for overnight clearing across the North and East 
Bays which may result in temperatures cooling a few degrees more 
than in the current forecast. While Friday looks to be dry, not too 
much of a warm up can be expected during the day. High temperatures 
on Friday will be in the low to mid 50s for much of the region on 
Friday.

&&

.LONG TERM...
Issued at 223 PM PST Thu Feb 19 2026
(Friday night through next Wednesday)

Colder weather continues into Saturday morning with lows in the low 
to mid 30s across the interior and upper 30s to mid 40s along the 
coastline. Interior Monterey/San Benito County and the Eastern Santa 
Clara Hills will drop into the upper 20s Friday night into Saturday 
morning. Additional Cold Weather Advisories (most areas) and a 
potential Extreme Cold Warning (portions of interior Monterey/San 
Benito Counties) will be needed again Friday night. Saturday will be 
slightly warmer during the day with highs in the mid 50s to low 60s. 
Overnight temperatures improve Saturday night into Sunday with most 
locations (outside of the interior Central Coast and East Bay Hills) 
staying in the 40s to low 50s. Sunday into next week - daytime high 
temperatures will be in the upper 50s to 60s while overnight lows 
are more seasonable in the 40s to low 50s.

Outside of the cooler temperatures, the long term pattern remains 
active. To start off, much of the region will be fairly dry Friday 
into Saturday. The exception to this is the North Bay which will see 
light rain returning Saturday afternoon and continuing through the 
rest of the weekend. Wondering what's bringing us our next round of 
storms? Well, a look at the 500 mb heights shows a deep upper level 
trough located offshore over the Northeastern Pacific Ocean and a 
building ridge over the Intermountain West. This will be associated 
with a deep surface low located to our north offshore of the Pacific 
Northwest. Although the low is to our north, it will bring enough 
moisture to support light rain this weekend for the North Bay and 
portions of the coastline. The pressure gradient between the low 
pressure system offshore and comparatively higher pressure over land 
will tighten Saturday into Sunday and result in another round of 
southerly gusty winds across the region. This is expected to bring 
gusts between 30-40 mph along the coastline and across the higher 
terrain late Saturday night through early Monday morning. 

By Monday into Tuesday, models show this low picking up a more 
tropical moisture tap oriented towards the Bay Area and Central 
Coast. This looks to bring another round of moderate rain to the 
region, however, given that the low has shifted further northwards 
the amounts have come down since the previous forecast cycle. The 
North Bay looks to receive the most with between 2-4" across the 
region, locally higher totals in the coastal mountains. The Santa 
Cruz Mountains looks to receive between 2-3" of precipitation and 
the coastal Santa Lucia Range receives between 1-2" between Sunday 
to late next week. Precipitation amounts for the rest of the region 
have come down drastically with on average 0.5"-1.0" expected. No 
additional snowfall is expected next week as this will be a warmer 
airmass compared to the cooler one that we saw this week. Confidence 
is low in thunderstorm development with these systems but we are 
continuing to monitor to this system arriving. That being said, 
models have trended further northwards over the past few runs and 
there is the possibility that this could  occur again. There may 
continue to be additional fluctuations in rainfall totals for next 
week through the weekend as we continue to get a clearer picture of 
this system.

&&

.AVIATION...
(06Z TAFS)
Issued at 954 PM PST Thu Feb 19 2026

The last few light showers are eroding  and winds are reducing. 
Winds continue to reduce in the late night with some sites turning 
light and variable. Southerly winds return into the mid to late 
morning as high clouds increase. Winds remain light to moderate 
through the afternoon with directions becoming largely determined by 
local effects. Directions turn more southerly into Friday night.

Vicinity of SFO...The last few showers are exiting with lingering, 
scattered, mid-level clouds. Winds turn Northwest overnight and 
remain breezy. These winds become light into early Friday, but 
increase slightly into the late morning and turn west-southwesterly, 
then southwesterly that evening, and southerly late that night.

SFO Bridge Approach...Similar to SFO.

Monterey Bay Terminals...Showers chances reduce further into the 
night as winds reduce and become light to moderate. Winds become 
light and variable into early Friday. SNS sees light southeast winds 
build into the mid morning and both sites see west-northwest winds 
for the afternoon. These winds reduce into Friday evening, becoming 
light and variable. 

&&

.MARINE...
(Tonight through next Wednesday)
Issued at 954 PM PST Thu Feb 19 2026

Winds ease tonight into Friday but remain hazardous to small
craft. Rough to very rough seas prevail through the week. Rain
chances return Saturday and continue into early next week.
Southerly winds will also increase on Saturday ahead of the
approaching storm system.

&&

.BEACHES...
Issued at 351 AM PST Thu Feb 19 2026

A High Surf Advisory remains in effect from the coastal North Bay
to coastal Monterey County until 9 AM Friday. Dangerous conditions
with localized beach erosion can be expected. Sneaker waves can 
sweep across the shoreline without warning, pulling people into 
the sea from rocks, jetties and beaches. Large breaking waves can 
overpower swimmers resulting in significant physical injury and 
increase the risk of drowning.

Stay off of jetties, piers, rocks, and other waterside 
infrastructure. Remain out of the water to avoid hazardous surf 
and NEVER turn your back on the ocean. Monitor local weather, surf
and tide forecasts at www.weather.gov/mtr.

&&

.CLIMATE...
Issued at 1047 PM PST Tue Feb 17 2026

The following are the record low temperatures at the long term sites 
for Friday, Feb 20th.

Location          Record Low

Santa Rosa        26 in 1913
Kentfield         27 in 1913
Napa              27 in 2018
Richmond          35 in 1990
Livermore         27 in 2018
San Francisco     38 in 1897
SFO Airport       36 in 2018
Redwood City      30 in 1933
Half Moon Bay     28 in 2018
Oakland Museum    36 in 2011
San Jose          30 in 1897
Salinas Airport   28 in 1953

&&

.MTR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
CA...High Surf Advisory until 9 AM PST Friday for CAZ006-505-509-529-
     530.

     Cold Weather Advisory from 1 AM to 9 AM PST Friday for CAZ502-
     503-505-508-512-513-528-529.

     Extreme Cold Warning from 1 AM to 9 AM PST Friday for CAZ504-506-
     510-514>518.

     Winter Weather Advisory until 7 AM PST Friday for CAZ517-518.

PZ...Small Craft Advisory until 3 AM PST Friday for Pigeon Pt to Pt 
     Pinos 0-10 nm-Pt Arena to Pt Reyes 0-10 nm-Pt Reyes to 
     Pigeon Pt 0-10 nm.

     Small Craft Advisory until 9 AM PST Friday for Pigeon Pt to Pt 
     Pinos 10-60 NM-Pt Arena to Pt Reyes 10-60 NM-Pt Pinos to Pt 
     Piedras Blancas 0-10 nm.

     Small Craft Advisory from 9 PM Friday to 9 AM PST Saturday for 
     Pt Arena to Pt Reyes 10-60 NM.

&&

$$

SHORT TERM...Kennedy
LONG TERM....Kennedy
AVIATION...Murdock
MARINE...Murdock

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Prepared by Boulder-Creek.com Weather at: Fri Feb 20 02:30:03 PST 2026
From the National Weather Service