Midwest, Winter storm and weather warnings
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The first full week of meteorological spring brought a severe weather threat to the Central U.S. with 24 confirmed tornadoes and multiple fatalities.
For the third time this month, we're forecasting an outbreak of severe thunderstorms. This time, the threat is mainly damaging winds, but a few tornadoes are possible. Here's where and when the threat is in play.
A string of tornadoes touched down in multiple states as severe weather stretched from Texas to Michigan.
Severe storms arrived as forecast on the evening of March 10, whipping up high winds, enormous hailstones and tornadoes. Did any hit Ohio?
A severe weather outbreak is likely across parts of the Plains and Midwest beginning Friday afternoon, where millions could see “monster hail” and tornadoes develop.
Destructive storms blasting through parts of the Midwest spawned tornadoes that hit Indiana and Illinois, as near-hurricane force winds swept parts of the region.
The risks for tornadoes and severe weather have shifted eastward into the Ohio Valley and the mid-Atlantic after multiple apparent tornadoes swept through Illinois and Indiana on Tuesday.
A rash of major storms across the Midwest left devastation behind on March 10, 2026. Illinois, Indiana and Michigan are left picking up the pieces after tornadoes, heavy rains and large hail
All types of severe weather are possible, including large hail and wind gusts that could cause damage and tornadoes, especially over parts of Missouri, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana and southern Michigan, as well as portions of the Texas Plains into southwest Oklahoma.
Oklahoma has been at the heart of "Tornado Alley" for many years, along with Texas, Kansas, Nebraska, Colorado and South Dakota. And while these states have seen plenty of tornadoes over the seasons, more recent analysis has shown that the most tornadic ...