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Are You Dreaming of a White Christmas? | News | National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI) Skip to main content
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Are You Dreaming of a White Christmas?

A snowy city with mountains and Christmas lights in the background and a light pole in the forefront with a sign reading “Carter Park”.
Courtesy of Canva.com

For those of you dreaming of a white Christmas, you can find places that have the best chance of being a winter wonderland according to weather history. 

Where does history say you should be in the Lower 48 states for the best chance of seeing a white Christmas? Most of Idaho, Minnesota, Maine, Upstate New York, the Allegheny Mountains of Pennsylvania and West Virginia, and, of course, the Rockies and the Sierra Nevada all have a high probability of seeing a white Christmas. Crested Butte, Colorado, is just one of about a handful of weather stations boasting a nearly 100 percent historical probability of seeing a white Christmas.

Map from Climate.gov showing the historic probability of at least 1 inch of snow on Christmas day.

 

Snowy Climates Based on Data

This map is based on the 1991–2020 Climate Normals, which are the latest three-decade averages of several climatological measurements. Among the many parameters available at hourly to annual time periods, this collection 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 15,000 stations operated by NOAA National Weather Service and its partners. You can find the Climate Normals for locations near you by using NCEI’s interactive map or search tool.

The Climate Normals for 1991–2020 were issued by NCEI in May 2021. The United Nations’ World Meteorological Organization (WMO) now requires the calculation of normals every decade.

While the map shows the climatological probability of snow-covered ground on December 25, the actual conditions this year may vary widely from these probabilities because the weather patterns present will determine if there is snow on the ground or if snow will fall on Christmas Day. These probabilities are useful as a guide only to show where snow on the ground is more likely. For prediction of your actual weather conditions, check out your local forecast at Weather.gov within seven days of Christmas.

Tracking U.S. Snowfall

If you would like to keep track of the snowfall across the United States on a daily basis, see the National Operational Hydrologic Remote Sensing Center’s National Snow Analyses.

Daily snow depth and snowfall extremes for U.S. locations are available from our Snow and Ice monitoring page. Monthly snow cover images from satellite data are available from Rutgers Snow Lab back to the late 1960s.









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