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Strong atmospheric river to bring heavy rain, snow, and flooding to California this week

A strong atmospheric river is forecast to impact California from December 23 to 27, 2025, bringing widespread heavy rainfall, flash flooding, and high-elevation snow. The system is expected to produce 250 to 500 mm (10–20 inches) of precipitation in parts of the Sierra Nevada and 150 to 300 mm (6–12 inches) in the Coast and Transverse Ranges. The National Weather Service has issued high-risk alerts for flash flooding across southern California and moderate winter storm impacts over the Sierra Nevada.

Satellite image of California as 0940 UTC on December 23, 2025

Satellite image of California at 09:40 UTC on December 23, 2025. Credit: NOAA/GOES East, Zoom Earth, The Watchers

A strong atmospheric river (AR) is forecast to bring heavy rain, mountain snow, and flooding across much of California this week, according to the Center for Western Weather and Water Extremes (CW3E) and the National Weather Service (NWS).

The first AR, which made landfall on December 20, produced 75–250 mm (3–10 inches) of rain across northern California before dissipating on December 22.

A second, stronger AR is expected to move onshore late Tuesday, December 23, followed by another storm system developing on December 24, which will maintain widespread precipitation through December 27.

Video credit: CW3E

Forecast models from CW3E’s West-WRF ensemble indicate the second AR could bring AR4 conditions (on a scale of 1 to 5) in San Diego County, and AR3 intensity along much of the coastal central and southern California.

Probabilities exceed 95% for integrated vapor transport (IVT) values above 250 kg m⁻¹ s⁻¹ along the coast and up to 85% for strong AR conditions within the system’s core.

GEFS_ARScaleMap_Forecast_Control_coast December 23 to 30 2025
Image credit: CW3E

Heavy precipitation is forecast to focus along the southern slopes of the Transverse Range, including the San Bernardino, San Gabriel, and Sierra Madre Mountains. Rainfall rates there could exceed 12 mm (0.5 inches) per hour, raising a high risk of flash flooding and shallow landslides, particularly near burn scars.

Video credit: CW3E

The Weather Prediction Center (WPC) has issued a high-risk (level 4 of 4) excessive rainfall outlook (ERO) for the Transverse Ranges and a moderate-risk (level 3 of 4) ERO for coastal southern California between December 23 and 25. Slight risk EROs cover much of coastal California, the Sacramento Valley, and the Sierra Nevada foothills.

Snowfall is expected to be significant in the Sierra Nevada, with 60–120 cm (24–48 inches) forecast above 2 400 m (8 000 feet) and localized totals potentially exceeding 180 cm (70 inches) near the crest by December 26. The combination of heavy snow and strong winds will likely produce blizzard conditions and extreme winter storm impacts.

Freezing levels are expected to start above 2 400 m (8 000 feet) but gradually fall below 1 800 m (6 000 feet) during the later phase of the event, expanding snow coverage in the Sierra and reducing flood potential in higher basins.

Hydrologic forecasts from the California-Nevada River Forecast Center (CNRFC) show rivers and streams across the state rising sharply during the second and third AR periods.

Both the Russian River at Hopland and the Sacramento River at Tehama Bridge are forecast to reach flood stage between December 23 and 25, while the San Diego River at Fashion Valley may exceed monitor stage on December 24.

Strong southerly winds are also expected across the coastal and mountainous regions, increasing the risk of downed trees and power outages.

The NWS advises continuous monitoring of local watches and warnings through the week as the atmospheric river system evolves.

I am an Assistant Editor and Severe Weather & Science Journalist at The Watchers, specializing in real-time severe weather coverage, geophysical event reporting, and research-driven scientific analysis. You can reach me at rishav(at)watchers(.)news.

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