Texas — A dense, humid stillness hangs over southeast Texas at sunrise, leaving headlights glowing against light mist and the pavement damp near bayou low spots. Warm air clings to neighborhoods from Sugar Land to Pasadena, carrying a faint coastal breeze and that familiar Gulf heaviness that hints at changes brewing later this week.
Residents should stay alert for patchy fog forming before dawn both today and Sunday. Visibility may briefly dip on slower roads, especially near waterways and open fields. Travelers heading toward early holiday errands should plan a few extra minutes and use low beams when haze thickens.
Warmth builds quickly again today, with highs rising into the lower 80s. South winds increase just enough to stir the sticky air and keep conditions feeling more like late September than mid-November. This steady warmth holds through Sunday, and to be fair, it provides ideal conditions for outdoor decorating, yard cleanup, and early Thanksgiving travel planning.
But models hint at a Winter Tease pattern shift. A surge of moisture gathers along the western Gulf late Monday, and clouds expand across Houston before sunrise Tuesday. A small but growing shower chance emerges Tuesday morning, followed by a stronger signal Wednesday as a broader storm system approaches. Heavy bursts of rain and a few thunderstorms may develop, potentially slowing commutes and flights during a busy pre-holiday stretch.
Cooler air waits behind the midweek storms—no Freeze or Frost signals yet for Houston, but a noticeable temperature dip is possible by late week.
Five-Day Outlook for Houston TX
Sat: 83/65 – Sunny; fog late.
Sun: 84/67 – Fog early; partly sunny.
Mon: 84/71 – Partly cloudy; patchy morning fog.
Tue: 84/70 – 20% showers; humid and warm.
Wed: 81/68 – 40% showers and storms; travel impacts possible.





