Friday, January 30, 2026

Quiet and cold weather on tap for southern Quebec

It is another frigid morning in Montreal on Friday, with windchill values in the -30s. January has been cold, with temperatures below -20C recorded at Trudeau Airport on 8 of the 30 days to date. Montreal has also had at least a trace of snow on 24 of the 30 days this month, making for constant icy driving conditions. (Valley Weather Photo)

High pressure will dominate the weather through the weekend and into next week, with temperatures moderating slowly, but remaining below normal for most of us. Montreal dropped to a chilly -22C (-8F) Friday morning, along with a northerly breeze resulting in windchill values in the -30s. A weak disturbance may set off a few flurries today for Montreal, but minimal accumulations are expected.

Saturday will be sunny and cold, with morning lows around -20C (-4F) and daytime highs close to -12C (10F). On Sunday, a strong Nor'Easter will move northeast in the Atlantic towards the Maritimes. This low will bring near-blizzard conditions along the immediate coast for place like the Outer Banks in North Carolina, Long Island and Cape Cod. The storm will then impact Nova Scotia and parts of New Brunswick with 15-30cm of snow and 80kmh wind gusts.

For southern Québec, the only impacts may be a few high clouds along with a cold damp northeast wind. High temperatures will be around -12C (10F). At this time next week looks fair with slowly warming temperatures. Highs however will remain below freezing as we head into the first week of February. No major storms are on the horizon for Montreal at this time.

The cold this weekend will stretch as far as south Florida and the Gulf of Mexico, with lows close to freezing and even a few snowflakes possible into central parts of the sunshine state.

The current cold snap has pushed snow far south into places that are not accustomed to it, such as Dallas, shown above. More heavy snow is forecast this weekend from the Carolinas to coastal New England. (AccuWeather Photo)


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