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85 MPH Wind Gusts and Flash Flooding Possible as Storms Roll Through the Central U.S.

Christy Bowen

2 hours ago
NOAA GOES-18 GeoColor composite satellite imagery from June 22, 2026, showing a large storm system with extensive cloud cover pushing from the Rockies eastward across the Plains, Midwest, and toward the East Coast, consistent with the multi-day severe weather threat impacting millions this week.
NOAA's GOES-18 satellite captures the storm system spreading across the central U.S. on June 22, 2026, bringing severe thunderstorm and flooding threats from the Plains to the East Coast. (NOAA/NESDIS/STAR)

Wave after wave of thunderstorms will roll through the central and eastern portions of the country this week, ushering in the chance of high winds, large hail, flash flooding, and isolated tornadoes. This is what you need to know heading into the new week about where and when severe weather may strike.

Rounds of Severe Storms to Hammer the Plains and East Coast Through Monday

Several rounds of thunderstorms will roam a zone from the Plains to the East Coast in the days ahead, continuing the action that fired up over the weekend. Multiple severe weather reports were made on Saturday across Wyoming and northeastern Colorado to the east into Kansas. This same storm system shifted to the east on Sunday, sending the worst of the weather into the Midwest to close out the weekend.

Many of the largest cities in the Plains and the Midwest had to dodge storms as they tried to celebrate Father's Day with barbecues and other outdoor events. Metro areas such as Oklahoma City and St. Louis were once again ground zero for Mother Nature's wrath. This same general area has already seen repeated rounds of storms and localized flooding over the last few weeks.

Monday is shaping up to be a wet and stormy day for millions of Americans. In the central portions of the country, thunderstorms are expected to ignite along a cold front that is stretching from the Plains into the mid-Atlantic.

NOAA Weather Prediction Center national forecast map valid June 22–23, 2026, showing rain and thunderstorm coverage across the central and eastern U.S., with heavy rain and flash flooding possible across the Mid-South and severe thunderstorms possible from the southern Plains through the mid-Atlantic corridor.
The WPC forecast map for Monday shows heavy rain, flash flooding, and severe thunderstorm risks stretching from the southern Plains to the mid-Atlantic. (NOAA/WPC/SPC/NHC)

The line of rain and storms will spread to the east and toward the busy Interstate 95 corridor on the East Coast. You can expect inclement conditions up and down a large swath of this corridor, from Charlotte to the north in Philadelphia. Some of the strongest storms could produce localized flash flooding and other impacts capable of bringing travel to a halt at times. Storms that pop up ahead of the frontal boundary could enhance the already high rainfall totals, making it an especially soggy day for those in the East.

Storms will hold off until the latter part of the day for Philadelphia. The City of Brotherly Love is bracing for afternoon thunderstorms and evening rain showers on Monday. Highs will hover in the mid 80s before sliding to about the 70-degree mark overnight. It will be a bit breezy with winds out of the south-southeast at 10 to 15 mph. The chance of rain will persist into the start of the day on Tuesday, potentially resulting in a wet morning commute.

Flooding concerns will be the story across some parts of the South. The immense moisture that came along with the former Tropical Storm Arthur last week has led to saturated soil across the Gulf Coast and Southeast. Water levels in area streams and rivers are also running high at this time. This means that it will not take much additional rain to exacerbate this flooding risk.

The southern flank of the weather maker will feature storms in places such as Nashville. The Music City should be ready for rain showers in the morning evolving to scattered thunderstorms in the afternoon. The Monday forecast is calling for highs in the upper 70s, lows that bottom out in the mid 60s, and winds out of west-southwest at 10 to 15 mph.


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