06/10/2026
⚡ ZAP WEATHER 3-DAY USA FORECAST
Grant Park + Full National Weather Breakdown
Use Zap as a weather decision layer for daily planning, family safety, and local risk awareness.
Location: Grant Park
Use case: Home / Personal
Watching: Severe, Rain, Wind, Frost, Lightning, Travel, Heat, Flooding
GRANT PARK WEATHER DECISION
Warnings in your area: No active warnings
Nothing active for Grant Park right now, but Zap is not giving a green light today.
Zap Decision: NO-GO
Reason: wind risk is high.
This is a Zap-risk-driven NO-GO, not a warning-driven NO-GO. That matters. There may not be an active warning on the map right now, but the setup around Grant Park has enough heat, humidity, wind, and storm risk in the next 6–12 hours that Zap is making the safer call.
Current Grant Park conditions:
Temperature: 87°F
Feels Like: 98°F
Condition: Partly cloudy
Dew Point: 78°F
Wind: 17 mph
Humidity: 66%
Pressure: 1010 mb
UV Index: 9
Sunrise: 5:17 AM
Sunset: 8:23 PM
That dew point near 78°F is the big red flag. The air is loaded with moisture, it feels tropical outside, and the heat index is already close to 100°F. Add wind around 17 mph and storm chances later, and this is not a quiet summer day.
ZAP RISK SIGNAL
Tornado: MARGINAL, 6–12h
Severe: ELEVATED, 6–12h
Hail: ELEVATED, 6–12h
Wind: HIGH, 6–12h
Flash Flood: LOW
Heat: MARGINAL, 6–12h
The strongest local signal is wind. Severe and hail are also elevated in the same 6–12 hour window. Tornado risk is not the lead hazard, but it is not zero either.
WHAT MATTERS NEXT
The dashboard says: “flash flood in 0h — unknown.”
That should not be the public lead. Flash flood risk is currently LOW on the Zap table. The better message is:
No active warning right now. Main next risk is high wind and elevated severe/hail risk in the next 6–12 hours. Flash flooding is low, but heavy downpours could still cause ponding if storms hit the same area.
LOCAL 0–48 HOUR SETUP
Today:
Hot, humid, and unstable. Temperatures push into the lower to mid 90s on the hourly feed, with winds building into the 15–19 mph range. The highest concern is later today into tonight when storms may develop and winds remain elevated.
Tonight:
Storm risk increases. The hourly data shows a rain signal near the evening window, including a heavier pocket around hour 18. If storms form, they may bring gusty winds, heavy rain, lightning, and quick temperature drops.
Wednesday:
Another active day. Wind may climb near 20 mph at times, with storm chances still on the table. The forecast shows strong storms possible and rain chances near 89%.
Thursday:
Cooler and calmer compared with the storm window. High near 77°F, lower rain chance, and clearer conditions expected.
Friday:
Storm chances return, but the risk looks lower than the main Wednesday/Thursday window.
GRANT PARK BOTTOM LINE
NO-GO today for loose outdoor items, exposed outdoor activities, lakefront plans, and any situation where sudden wind or storms would create problems.
Secure patio furniture, trash cans, tents, umbrellas, and anything lightweight. If storms approach, get indoors before the wind hits. Do not wait for thunder to be overhead.
USA 3-DAY FORECAST
DAY 1: WEDNESDAY
WEST COAST
Decision: WATCH
The West Coast is not the center of the severe-weather outbreak, but the pattern is still active. Coastal California should be more stable than the interior, while the Pacific Northwest deals with cooler air, showers, and mountain impacts.
California’s coast stays mostly manageable. Inland California, mountain passes, and desert-facing areas should watch wind and dry air.
Main risks:
Gusty inland winds
Dry air
Fire-weather pockets
Mountain pass travel issues
Cooler, unsettled weather farther north
NORTHWEST
Decision: CAUTION
The Northwest has rain and mountain weather in the picture. Western Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and western Montana may see showers, cooler temperatures, and gusty changes. Higher terrain will be more sensitive than the valleys.
Main risks:
Rain showers
Mountain travel impacts
Gusty winds
Cooler air
Lower visibility in heavier showers
SOUTHWEST
Decision: CAUTION
The Southwest is mainly a heat, wind, and fire-weather story. Arizona, New Mexico, southern Nevada, southern Utah, and desert California need to watch low humidity and gusty winds.
This is not a good setup for outdoor burning. One spark can become a problem fast.
Main risks:
Heat
Low humidity
Gusty winds
Fire spread potential
Dry lightning in isolated spots
ROCKIES / INTERMOUNTAIN WEST
Decision: WATCH
The Rockies sit between the dry western pattern and the stormier Plains. Mountain storms may pop in spots, while other areas stay dry and windy. Conditions can change quickly by elevation.
Main risks:
Mountain storms
Gusty winds
Lightning
Fire-weather pockets
Travel changes through passes
NORTHERN PLAINS
Decision: CAUTION
The Northern Plains have leftover storm energy and active boundaries nearby. The main severe focus is farther southeast into the Upper Mississippi Valley and Midwest, but the Dakotas and nearby areas still need to watch storms, wind shifts, and heavy rain pockets.
Main risks:
Scattered storms
Gusty winds
Lightning
Heavy rain pockets
Travel slowdowns
CENTRAL PLAINS
Decision: CAUTION / NO-GO in storm zones
The Central Plains stay active. Kansas, Nebraska, northern Missouri, and nearby areas have enough heat and moisture for strong to severe storms. Storms may produce hail, damaging winds, and heavy downpours.
Main risks:
Large hail
Damaging winds
Frequent lightning
Heavy rain
Evening travel impacts
SOUTHERN PLAINS / TEXAS / OKLAHOMA
Decision: WATCH / CAUTION
The Southern Plains have storms possible near boundaries and the dryline. Texas and Oklahoma are not the main national severe bullseye today, but any storm that forms in the heat and moisture can become strong.
Main risks:
Hail
Gusty winds
Lightning
Localized heavy rain
Heat stress
MIDWEST
Decision: NO-GO in storm zones
This is one of the biggest areas to watch today. Parts of Iowa, Missouri, Wisconsin, Illinois, and nearby states are in a dangerous severe-weather setup. Storms may bring large hail, damaging winds, and tornado risk.
Northern Illinois, including the broader Chicago region, needs to stay alert. Zap’s Grant Park wind signal lines up with the larger regional severe-weather setup.
Main risks:
Damaging winds
Large hail
Tornado risk
Heavy rain
Power outages
GREAT LAKES
Decision: NO-GO in active storm corridors
The Great Lakes region has a serious storm setup. Wisconsin, northern Illinois, Michigan, northern Indiana, and nearby areas may see storms intensify and move through in clusters or lines.
If storms organize, wind damage becomes a major issue.
Main risks:
Damaging winds
Hail
Tornado risk
Lightning
Heavy rain and localized flooding
OHIO VALLEY
Decision: WATCH / CAUTION
The Ohio Valley has a moist and unstable air mass in place. Storms may develop and produce damaging downbursts, especially where storms become water-loaded.
Main risks:
Damaging winds
Heavy rain
Lightning
Localized flooding
Travel delays
LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY
Decision: WATCH
The Lower Mississippi Valley stays humid with scattered storm chances. This is not the main severe bullseye today, but any stronger storm can produce heavy rain and lightning.
Main risks:
Heavy downpours
Lightning
Gusty winds
Street flooding
Slow travel
GULF COAST
Decision: WATCH
The Gulf Coast has daily storm chances and deep moisture. There is no major Atlantic tropical threat right now, but the Bay of Campeche is being watched for weak development potential later. Even without tropical development, Gulf moisture can still fuel heavy downpours.
Main risks:
Tropical-style downpours
Lightning
Street flooding
Marine hazards
Rip currents locally
SOUTHEAST
Decision: WATCH
The Southeast has typical summer storm energy: warm, humid air, scattered storms, lightning, and downpours. Florida may see storms develop during the afternoon and evening.
Main risks:
Lightning
Heavy rain
Gusty storms
Localized flooding
Outdoor delays
MID-ATLANTIC
Decision: WATCH / CAUTION
The Mid-Atlantic has heat, humidity, and storm chances. Damaging wind from downbursts is the main thing to watch where storms grow stronger.
Main risks:
Heat
Thunderstorms
Damaging wind gusts
Lightning
Heavy rain pockets
NORTHEAST
Decision: WATCH
The Northeast is not the top severe-weather zone today, but storms are possible in the broader pattern. Heat and humidity may also become more noticeable ahead of the front.
Main risks:
Storms in spots
Lightning
Heavy rain pockets
Humidity
Travel delays
EAST COAST
Decision: WATCH
The East Coast is mixed. The northern side has a building storm threat later in the period, while the southern side stays warm, humid, and storm-prone.
Main risks:
Thunderstorms
Lightning
Heavy rain
Heat and humidity
Travel delays
ALASKA
Decision: LOCAL WATCH
Alaska is outside the lower-48 storm pattern. Check local NWS alerts for aviation, marine travel, remote work, and mountain routes.
Main risks:
Local wind
Rain or snow by elevation
Marine hazards
Remote travel exposure
HAWAII
Decision: LOCAL WATCH
Hawaii’s conditions depend on island, elevation, and trade winds. Watch local showers, surf, and marine updates.
Main risks:
Passing showers
Surf and marine hazards
Localized downpours
Windward-side changes
DAY 2: THURSDAY
WEST COAST
Decision: WATCH
The West Coast remains quieter than the central and eastern U.S., but inland wind, dry air, and mountain changes continue. Pacific Northwest showers may linger.
Main risks:
Gusty inland winds
Showers north
Mountain travel
Dry air
Fire-weather pockets
NORTHWEST
Decision: WATCH / CAUTION
The Northwest stays cool and unsettled in spots. Mountain areas may still see showers and travel changes.
Main risks:
Showers
Cooler air
Mountain roads
Gusty wind
Lower visibility
SOUTHWEST
Decision: CAUTION
The Southwest remains hot and dry. Fire-weather concerns continue where wind and low humidity overlap.
Main risks:
Fire weather
Heat
Low humidity
Gusty winds
Outdoor ignition risk
ROCKIES / INTERMOUNTAIN WEST
Decision: WATCH
The Rockies keep some storm and wind potential, especially as energy shifts east. Terrain-driven storms can still produce lightning and gusty outflow.
Main risks:
Lightning
Gusty winds
Isolated storms
Fire-weather pockets
Mountain travel impacts
NORTHERN PLAINS
Decision: WATCH
The main severe focus shifts away from parts of the Northern Plains, but leftover storms, rain, and gusty winds remain possible. Any areas hit by storms Wednesday should watch flooded roads and debris.
Main risks:
Lingering storms
Gusty winds
Heavy rain pockets
Post-storm hazards
Travel slowdowns
CENTRAL PLAINS
Decision: WATCH / CAUTION
Storms remain possible along the front and boundaries. Some storms may still produce hail and damaging wind, but the biggest Day 2 focus shifts toward Missouri, Iowa, Illinois, Wisconsin, Indiana, Michigan, and northwest Ohio.
Main risks:
Hail
Damaging wind
Lightning
Heavy rain
Localized flooding
SOUTHERN PLAINS / TEXAS / OKLAHOMA
Decision: CAUTION
The Southern Plains can still see scattered severe storms, especially from eastern Kansas into the broader southern Plains. Large hail and damaging winds are the main concerns.
Main risks:
Large hail
Damaging winds
Lightning
Heat
Heavy rain pockets
MIDWEST
Decision: NO-GO in storm zones
This is the main Day 2 danger zone. Northeast Missouri, southern and eastern Iowa, southern Wisconsin, northern and central Illinois, northern Indiana, lower Michigan, and far northwest Ohio are all areas to watch closely.
Storms may be strong enough for damaging winds over 75 mph, large hail over 2 inches, and tornadoes. Some tornadoes could be strong.
Main risks:
Destructive wind gusts
Large hail
Tornadoes
Power outages
Heavy rain
GREAT LAKES
Decision: NO-GO
The Great Lakes and Midwest are in a serious storm setup Thursday. Storms may move fast and organize into damaging lines or clusters. Southern Wisconsin, northern Illinois, northern Indiana, Michigan, and northwest Ohio need a warning plan before storms arrive.
Main risks:
Destructive winds
Tornadoes
Large hail
Lightning
Heavy rain and flooding
OHIO VALLEY
Decision: CAUTION / NO-GO in warned areas
The Ohio Valley gets more active Thursday as storms move east. Northern Indiana, northwest Ohio, and nearby areas are closer to the stronger storm corridor, while the rest of the valley should watch scattered strong storms and heavy rain.
Main risks:
Damaging winds
Hail
Tornado risk in northern areas
Heavy rain
Lightning
LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY
Decision: WATCH
Storm chances continue, but the main severe focus is north. Still, humid air can fuel downpours and lightning.
Main risks:
Heavy rain
Lightning
Gusty storms
Street flooding
Travel delays
GULF COAST
Decision: WATCH
The Gulf Coast stays humid and storm-prone. No major organized tropical threat is expected, but downpours can still cause local flooding.
Main risks:
Downpours
Lightning
Marine hazards
Rip currents locally
Humid heat
SOUTHEAST
Decision: WATCH
Scattered storms continue across the Southeast. Florida and coastal areas should watch lightning and quick downpours.
Main risks:
Lightning
Heavy rain
Gusty winds
Localized flooding
Outdoor delays
MID-ATLANTIC
Decision: CAUTION
The Mid-Atlantic has a separate severe-weather risk. Widely scattered severe storms may produce damaging winds and large hail from the Mid-Atlantic into the central Appalachians.
Main risks:
Damaging wind
Large hail
Lightning
Heavy rain
Travel delays
NORTHEAST
Decision: WATCH / CAUTION
Storms start becoming more of a concern as the system approaches. Heat and humidity may also increase ahead of the front.
Main risks:
Thunderstorms
Lightning
Heavy rain
Humidity
Travel delays
EAST COAST
Decision: WATCH / CAUTION
The East Coast sees increasing storm chances, especially inland and toward the Mid-Atlantic. Coastal areas should watch timing because storms may reach some areas later in the day or evening.
Main risks:
Storms
Lightning
Heavy rain
Gusty winds
Heat and humidity
ALASKA
Decision: LOCAL WATCH
Check local alerts for marine, aviation, and remote travel.
HAWAII
Decision: LOCAL WATCH
Watch local showers, surf, and island-specific alerts.
DAY 3: FRIDAY
WEST COAST
Decision: WATCH
The West Coast stays outside the biggest storm zone. Main concerns are local wind, dry air inland, and mountain changes farther north.
Main risks:
Dry wind
Fire-weather pockets
Mountain travel
Marine conditions
Local showers north
NORTHWEST
Decision: WATCH
The Northwest may still see showers in spots, but the national severe focus is east.
Main risks:
Showers
Cooler air
Mountain roads
Gusty winds
Travel changes
SOUTHWEST
Decision: CAUTION
Hot and dry conditions continue. Fire-weather awareness remains important.
Main risks:
Heat
Fire weather
Low humidity
Gusty winds
Outdoor ignition risk
ROCKIES / INTERMOUNTAIN WEST
Decision: WATCH
The Rockies may see isolated storms, especially near the central and southern High Plains. Confidence on storm coverage is lower, but any storm can produce wind and hail.
Main risks:
Isolated severe storms
Hail
Gusty winds
Lightning
Fire-weather pockets
NORTHERN PLAINS
Decision: WATCH
The Northern Plains are quieter than earlier in the week, but leftover storm boundaries and post-storm impacts may remain.
Main risks:
Lingering storms
Wind
Flooded roads in spots
Lightning
Travel issues
CENTRAL PLAINS
Decision: WATCH
The Central Plains may still see scattered storms, but the main severe focus shifts east and southeast. Boundaries left behind by previous storms can still spark local trouble.
Main risks:
Scattered storms
Hail
Wind gusts
Lightning
Heavy rain pockets
SOUTHERN PLAINS / TEXAS / OKLAHOMA
Decision: WATCH
Heat and humidity continue, with isolated to scattered storms possible. Some storms may become strong if they can form.
Main risks:
Heat
Isolated storms
Hail
Wind gusts
Heavy rain pockets
MIDWEST
Decision: WATCH / CAUTION
The Midwest begins transitioning out of the main severe corridor, but storms and heavy rain may still affect parts of the region. Areas hit earlier should watch flooded roads and power issues.
Main risks:
Lingering storms
Heavy rain
Flooded roads
Gusty wind
Lightning
GREAT LAKES
Decision: WATCH / CAUTION
The lower Great Lakes may still see storm activity as the front moves east. The worst Thursday threat should be shifting out, but Friday can still bring showers, storms, and travel slowdowns.
Main risks:
Storms
Gusty winds
Heavy rain
Lightning
Travel delays
OHIO VALLEY
Decision: WATCH / CAUTION
The Ohio Valley stays unsettled. Storms may continue along and ahead of the front, especially east and south.
Main risks:
Thunderstorms
Damaging wind in stronger cells
Heavy rain
Lightning
Localized flooding
LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY
Decision: WATCH
Storms remain possible in warm, humid air. Heavy rain can still be a problem in spots even if severe risk is lower.
Main risks:
Heavy downpours
Lightning
Street flooding
Gusty winds
Travel slowdowns
GULF COAST
Decision: WATCH
Gulf moisture keeps daily storm chances alive. The Bay of Campeche may have weak low pressure nearby, but development odds stay low. Rain and marine conditions matter more than tropical development right now.
Main risks:
Downpours
Lightning
Marine hazards
Localized flooding
Rip currents locally
SOUTHEAST
Decision: WATCH
The Southeast stays warm and humid with scattered storms. Any stronger cell can produce gusty wind and heavy rain.
Main risks:
Lightning
Heavy rain
Gusty storms
Localized flooding
Outdoor delays
MID-ATLANTIC
Decision: CAUTION / NO-GO in storm zones
This becomes the main Day 3 severe-weather focus. The Mid-Atlantic into the central Appalachians may see scattered severe storms Friday afternoon and evening.
Damaging winds are the main threat, but large hail is possible too. Storms may form into clusters and push toward the coast later.
Main risks:
Damaging winds
Large hail
Lightning
Heavy rain
Evening travel impacts
NORTHEAST
Decision: WATCH / CAUTION
The Northeast should watch the front approaching from the west. Storm chances increase, especially inland and near the lower Great Lakes into interior Northeast.
Main risks:
Storms
Damaging wind in stronger cells
Lightning
Heavy rain
Travel delays
EAST COAST
Decision: CAUTION
The East Coast, especially from the Mid-Atlantic northward, should watch Friday afternoon and evening storms. Heat and humidity ahead of the front may help storms strengthen.
Main risks:
Damaging winds
Storm clusters
Lightning
Heavy rain
Travel delays
ALASKA
Decision: LOCAL WATCH
Check local NWS alerts before remote, marine, or aviation travel.
HAWAII
Decision: LOCAL WATCH
Watch local showers, surf, and marine hazards.
ZAP NATIONAL BOTTOM LINE
Grant Park:
NO-GO today because wind risk is HIGH and severe/hail risk is elevated in the 6–12 hour window. No active warning is showing, but Zap risk is enough to stop or delay weather-sensitive plans.
Day 1 national focus:
Upper Mississippi Valley, Midwest, northern Illinois, Wisconsin, Iowa, Missouri, and Great Lakes for severe storms, damaging wind, hail, and tornado risk.
Day 2 national focus:
Northeast Missouri, Iowa, southern Wisconsin, northern/central Illinois, northern Indiana, lower Michigan, and northwest Ohio. This is a serious severe-weather day with destructive wind, large hail, and tornado risk.
Day 3 national focus:
Mid-Atlantic and central Appalachians for damaging winds and large hail, with storms possibly reaching the East Coast later.
Flooding:
Localized flash flooding possible where storms repeat, especially in urban areas, roads, small streams, and low-lying places.
Tropics:
Bay of Campeche is being watched, but development chances are low. Gulf Coast impacts are mainly rain, lightning, and marine hazards, not a major tropical system.
Final safety call:
Secure loose outdoor items around Grant Park now. Keep phones charged. Have alerts turned on. If storms approach, move indoors before the wind hits. If thunder roars, go indoors. If water covers the road, turn around.
Zap Weather helps people make safer weather decisions with real-time alerts, AI-powered risk guidance, and clear go / no-go calls for home, travel, agriculture, and weather-sensitive work.