A slow-moving band of thunderstorms is bearing down on some of the driest ground in the southern United States, setting up a dangerous flash flood threat that stretches from South Texas and the Hill Country through the Houston metro area and along the upper Gulf Coast. The Weather Prediction Center’s Excessive Rainfall Outlook flags the region at elevated risk through at least Tuesday, April 21, 2026, with some models suggesting rainfall totals of four to eight inches are possible where storms stall over the same corridors for hours.
The timing could hardly be worse. Much of the affected area is mired in severe to extreme drought, according to the latest U.S. Drought Monitor analysis and a Southeast Drought Status Update published April 16, 2026, by NOAA’s National Integrated Drought Information System. Months of rainfall deficits have left soils crusted and compacted, stripped vegetation in some areas, and drawn down reservoir and groundwater levels across the region. When rain hits ground in that condition, it behaves more like pavement than sponge, sheeting into streets, creeks, and storm drains far faster than it would in a normal year.
Where the threat is highest
Forecasters at the Weather Prediction Center point to a combination of atmospheric ingredients fueling the risk: high instability, abundant Gulf moisture streaming northward, and weak steering winds that allow storm cells to park over the same locations. Their forecast discussion highlights several zones of particular concern:
- Houston metro and the upper Texas coast: Paved surfaces and dense development funnel runoff quickly into bayous and underpasses. Buffalo Bayou, Brays Bayou, and other waterways that flooded catastrophically during Hurricane Harvey in 2017 remain vulnerable when rainfall rates exceed two inches per hour, even with post-Harvey drainage improvements still being phased in.
- Texas Hill Country: Thin soils over limestone and narrow, steep-walled creek beds make this region one of the most flash-flood-prone landscapes in North America. Low-water crossings along the Guadalupe, Blanco, and Pedernales rivers can become impassable within minutes of a heavy downpour upstream.
- South Texas and the Rio Grande Plain: Drought-stressed rangeland and clay soils that crack when dry can seal shut once saturated, producing runoff rates that surprise even experienced ranchers. Small tributaries feeding the Nueces and San Antonio rivers are especially reactive.
The Weather Prediction Center’s precipitation hazards service generates machine-readable polygons showing where forecast rainfall is expected to exceed local flash flood guidance thresholds. Emergency managers across the region use those polygons alongside National Weather Service watches and warnings to stage resources and make decisions about road closures.
Why drought makes flooding worse, not better
It sounds counterintuitive: a region desperate for rain facing a flood emergency. But the science is well established. Prolonged dry conditions bake certain soil types into a near-hydrophobic state, a phenomenon documented in peer-reviewed soil science research on water repellency in drought-stressed landscapes. Water beads and runs off rather than soaking in. Separately, NASA Earth Observatory reporting on the current Southeast drought has referenced depleted groundwater reserves detected by the GRACE-FO satellite mission, confirming that the moisture deficit extends well below the surface. Even if topsoil appears to have some absorption capacity, the deeper storage that normally buffers heavy rain is largely tapped out.
That matters because the flash flood guidance calculations used by NWS River Forecast Centers assume a certain infiltration rate. When drought has altered soil structure, actual runoff can outpace those assumptions, meaning flooding arrives faster and crests higher than models initially predict. In past Texas events with similar drought-to-deluge conditions, including the deadly Memorial Day 2015 floods along the Blanco River, the gap between forecast and reality caught communities off guard.
What forecasters still do not know
Several pieces of the puzzle remain unsettled as of Monday evening. Exact rainfall totals for specific cities and counties depend on higher-resolution guidance that updates every few hours, and small shifts in storm track or speed could concentrate the heaviest rain in a narrow corridor or spread it more broadly. The difference between those two scenarios is the difference between localized catastrophic flooding and a wider but more manageable soaking…