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    • Needed Rain Tonight And Saturday – SCDNR

      South Carolina Department of Natural Resources color logo and white text of agency name and State Climatology Office

      Weather Alert  –  January 2, 2026

      Needed Rain Tonight And Saturday

      Good morning and welcome to 2026. I hope y’all had a grand New Year’s celebration with your friends and family. I know some of y’all did because driving home from my girlfriend’s house during the first minutes of the year, it sounded like Colonel Sumter’s men were driving the British out of Columbia’s Rosewood neighborhood.

      This morning, a storm centered over the southern Plains is moving our way, bringing us some needed rain over the next 36 hours. The rain will reach the northwest later this evening and spread over the state through Saturday morning. While the entire state will see some rain, the southern part will get more than the northern part.

      The rainfall forecast for now through 7 a.m. Sunday from the National Weather Service.

      Here’s the National Weather Service’s forecast for rainfall across South Carolina
      through early Sunday. Most of the state will see a half-inch to an inch of rain.
      Locally heavier rain will fall over the southern part of the state,
      where amounts can exceed one inch in spots.

      Image Source: WeatherBELL

      Meanwhile, a cold front to our north and west will shift southward and send chilly air into the northern part of the state. That will keep the Upstate, Catawba region, and upper Pee Dee in the upper 40s and low 50s, while the Lowcountry sees highs in the 60s.

      The warm air over the southern part of the state will be conducive to thunderstorms rumbling through during the afternoon and early evening. A part of the Lowcountry will be at risk for seeing an isolated severe storm.

      This is the latest Day 2 Severe Weather Outlook graphic from the Storm Prediction Center, covering Saturday and Saturday night.

      The level 1 of 5 (marginal) risk area on the Storm Prediction Center’s outlook for Saturday is the area of concern for severe storms; the concern is for isolated damaging wind and an isolated tornado.

      This storm system will move out Saturday evening, with dry and seasonably cool air pushing in behind it. Sunday may start with lingering low clouds and fog, but it’s likely to be sunny across the state by the afternoon with highs in the mid to upper 50s from north to south.

      Monday also looks dry, with high pressure centered over New York controlling our weather. Highs will range from the mid-50s north to the lower 60s south.

      That area of high pressure will slide eastward on Tuesday, and southerly to southwesterly winds around the departing high will give us a warmup. Temperatures will run well above normal again on Tuesday through at least Thursday. We’ll see highs in the 60s on Tuesday, upper 60s and lower 70s on Wednesday, then most of the state will reach the 70s on Thursday. Tuesday and Wednesday should feature plenty of sun, but clouds will stream in on Thursday ahead of our next cold front.

      Computer models show varying ideas about the front coming our way late next week. It could move in on Friday and become stationary through next weekend, or it could stall to our northwest and not move through until Sunday. So, there is a lot of uncertainty about what the weather will be like during that time. Once that front finally pushes through, we’re likely to see a period of colder-than-average weather.


      This week’s Drought Monitor indicates an expansion of drought conditions since last week. 

      The latest U. S. Drought Monitor shows about 40 percent of the state in a drought and most other areas abnormally dry.

      Rain coming through Saturday will help, but won’t get rid of the drought entirely. Another dry spell Sunday through at least Thursday will not help matters. The setup for next Friday and next weekend has a chance to bring us substantial rainfall, but don’t get your hopes up because most computer models do not show us seeing a soaking.


      Frank Strait
      Severe Weather Liaison
      S.C. State Climate Office

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