It could be a wet and windy Friday afternoon around Las Vegas as storms are forecast to develop in the Spring Mountains and perhaps in the valley, the National Weather Service says.
Las Vegas Weather
Cloudy skies will clear early Thursday in the Las Vegas Valley, bringing on another hot day.
A break from the Las Vegas heat spell is on its way — but you’ll have to wait until early next week for it.
Tuesday should see a maximum temperature of 109 degrees at McCarran Internation Airport, identical to Monday’s high, says the National Weather Service.
Monday’s Las Vegas Valley weather will be nearly identical to Sunday when the mercury rose to 107 with light and variable winds.
The high temperature on Sunday is expected to top out at 107, says the National Weather Service.
The hot weather expected this week isn’t likely to challenge the record heat wave that left Las Vegas Valley residents sweltering for nine straight days eight decades ago.
The first day of a heat wave will settle over the Las Vegas Valley on Saturday, says the National Weather Service.
The hottest weather of the summer so far will envelop the Las Vegas Valley over the next week and perhaps longer, the National Weather Service says.
Las Vegas Valley temperatures will be slightly below normal Thursday with much lighter winds, the National Weather Service says.
A low-pressure system will drop temperatures in the Las Vegas Valley on Wednesday and Thursday — before a long blast of heat.
Tuesday appears to be nearly a carbon copy of Monday’s weather in the Las Vegas Valley — warm and windy.
It will be a warm and windy start to the workweek for the Las Vegas Valley.
A high temperature in the low 90s is forecast for Las Vegas on Saturday. Strong winds felt Friday will moderate a bit.
Hot and windy conditions will cover the Las Vegas Valley on Friday, the National Weather Service says.
A recent Wall Street Journal poll of leading economists put the probability of the United States going into recession over the next 12 months at 63 percent. Conventional wisdom is that the Federal Reserve Bank will continue raising interest rates to combat stubborn high inflation, thereby slowing the economy and causing gross domestic product to […]
Accumulations in the nearby mountains could be between 8 and 16 inches above 7,000 feet, forecasters said. About 3 to 8 inches are possible above 5,000 feet.
It was the coldest morning in the valley since Jan. 2, 2022, more than 1,100 days.
Fire departments from Clark County and elsewhere in Nevada are sending dozens of firefighters to assist in battling deadly wildfires in Southern California.
Wind gusts largely in the upper 30-mph range were felt across much of the Las Vegas Valley but didn’t get much stronger.