Minnesota. Maine. Upstate New York. The Allegheny Mountains of Pennsylvania and West Virginia. Practically anywhere in Idaho. And of course, the Rockies or the Sierra Nevada Mountains. These are the places where weather history suggests you want to be if you’re looking for the best chance of a white Christmas.
The map at right shows the historic probability of there being at least 1-inch of snow on the ground in the Lower 48 states on December 25 based on the latest (1981-2010)ย U.S. Climate Normalsย from NOAA’s National Climatic Data Center. ย Dark gray shows places where the probability is less than 10 percent, while white shows probabilities greater than 90 ย percent.
The 1981โ2010 Climate Normals are the latest three-decade averages of several climatological measurements. This dataset contains daily and monthly Normals of temperature, precipitation, snowfall, heating and cooling degree days, frost/freeze dates, and growing degree days calculated from observations at approximately 9,800 stations operated by NOAAโs National Weather Service.
While the map shows the climatological probability that a snow depth of at least one inch will be observed on December 25, the actual conditions this year may vary widely from these probabilities because the weather patterns present will determine the snow on the ground or snowfall on Christmas day. These probabilities are useful as a guide only to show where snow on the ground is more likely.ย For prediction of your actual weather on Christmas Day, check out your local forecast atย Weather.gov.
If you would like to keep track of the snowfall across the United States on a daily basis, see NCDC’sย U.S. Daily Snowfallย map.