DAY 1 MARGINAL SEVERE WEATHER RISK OVER PARTS OF FLORIDA…AND FROM THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY INTO KANSAS…FORECAST SYNOPSIS…ISSUED MAY 12, 2026…11:45 A.M. EDT – Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Unsplash)
The Florida Peninsula and a corridor stretching from southeast Kansas into the Great Lakes region could see isolated severe thunderstorms today. The Storm Prediction Center placed both areas under a marginal risk in its latest Day 1 outlook, citing enough instability and lift for scattered cells capable of damaging winds or hail. Forecasters noted the threat remains limited in coverage, yet the potential for localized impacts still warrants attention from residents and travelers.
Where the Risk Is Highest
Across Florida, a moist and moderately unstable air mass sits in place ahead of a shortwave trough moving east from southern Alabama. Afternoon heating combined with sea-breeze convergence should trigger scattered storms, especially near the east coast. A few multicell clusters or brief supercells could produce gusty winds and small hail.
Farther north, the setup is drier and more marginal. Strong southwesterly winds will slowly moisten the air ahead of a cold front, but dew points remain in the 30s and 40s for much of the day. Thunderstorm coverage should stay sparse and high-based, limiting the overall threat to isolated hail and gusty winds into early evening.
Key Factors Driving the Threat
Model guidance shows surface-based CAPE values between 1,000 and 3,000 J/kg over Florida, with effective shear around 30 to 40 knots. Those ingredients support organized cells, though low-level rotation remains modest. Tornado probabilities sit near 2 percent, with any twisters expected to stay weak.
North of Kansas, instability peaks near 500 J/kg and shear is weaker. The environment favors brief, strong updrafts rather than long-lived supercells. Forecasters emphasize that even limited moisture can still produce damaging wind gusts if storms manage to form.
What to Watch For
Residents in the outlined areas should monitor updates through the afternoon. The main hazards include:
- Damaging thunderstorm winds, especially in Florida
- Small to marginally severe hail
- Isolated brief tornadoes, most likely along the Florida east coast
Storms are expected to develop between late morning and late afternoon, with activity tapering after sunset.
Staying Prepared
Local National Weather Service offices will issue any necessary watches or warnings as storms develop. People outdoors should have a plan to reach sturdy shelter quickly if skies darken or warnings are posted. The marginal designation signals a lower overall threat, yet isolated strong storms can still cause damage where they occur.
Forecasters will continue to refine the outlook through the day as new data arrives. Anyone in the risk areas is encouraged to check official sources before heading out this afternoon.
