SOUTHERN MINNESOTA, KANSAS, AND OKLAHOMA — A significant severe weather day is shaping up for Thursday April 23, 2026 across a corridor stretching from southern Minnesota through Kansas and into Oklahoma. Supercells producing very large hail over 2 inches are expected to be the dominant storm mode during the daytime hours, with the potential for an overnight wind bag mode to evolve as storms organize into a squall line through the evening. A tornado threat also exists but is expected to remain more isolated and random given the current wind shear vectors in place.
Core Hail Threat Centered From Omaha Through Wichita to Oklahoma City
The 2-plus inch hail threat is concentrated within a dashed oval on the outlook map centered across the most unstable corridor from Omaha southward through Kansas City, Wichita, and into Oklahoma City. This zone carries the highest probability of very large to giant hail with the supercell phase of Thursday’s storm activity during the afternoon and early evening hours.
The broader Level 2 risk zone at 15% probability extends outward from this core to cover a wider area including Minneapolis, Des Moines, and surrounding communities, while a Level 1 zone at 5% covers the full extent of the outlined severe weather area across the region.
Supercells Drive the Daytime Threat Before Overnight Wind Mode
Thursday’s storm evolution is expected to follow a two-phase pattern. During the daytime hours, discrete supercells will be the primary storm mode across the Plains, capable of producing the very large hail highlighted in the outlook alongside an isolated tornado threat that cannot be entirely dismissed despite the less favorable shear setup.
As the evening progresses, storms are expected to consolidate and transition into a more linear squall line configuration, potentially producing a widespread damaging wind threat across a broad corridor overnight. The overnight wind bag mode would extend the severe weather threat well beyond the initial daytime supercell activity.
Tornado Potential Exists but Remains More Isolated
While Thursday’s setup is primarily a hail and wind event, a tornado threat is present across the risk corridor. Wind shear vectors may keep tornado development more isolated and random compared to more classic tornado outbreak setups, but the possibility cannot be completely ruled out with the supercell activity expected during the afternoon hours…