New York – Cold flakes drift across the Capital Region this morning as a gray sky hangs low over the Hudson, and thin powder collects on windshields along Route 9 and I-787. The air feels sharper, and the pavement glistens — a quiet but unmistakable December winter tease for Albany as holiday travel begins to ramp up.
Light snow remains possible through the morning, with temperatures stuck in the 20s and a wind chill dipping to near 3° by afternoon. Meteorologists now track scattered snow showers sliding southeast out of the Mohawk Valley, and while accumulation stays light — generally under an inch — visibility may drop quickly in short bursts. Drivers should plan extra minutes on the commute, especially where slushy patches refreeze on bridges and shaded ramps.
By tonight, skies turn partly cloudy and temperatures fall into the upper teens. A reinforcing push of cold air moves in Monday, and models hint at a brief snow-shower window before noon, followed by increasing sunshine and a high near 26°. To be fair, nothing suggests a major storm early this week, but early-season setups like this often produce flash-freeze pockets, especially where morning melt refreezes late day.
Tuesday brings a calmer look, with mostly sunny skies and a high near 30°. After that, modest warming arrives mid-week as Christmas travel begins to accelerate. Long-range trends show a subtle pattern shift — no storm signal yet, but enough moisture and temperature variation to justify a “watch for updates” mindset heading into next weekend.
Five-Day Outlook (Sun–Thu)
• Today: Chance snow; high 26°. Light accumulation possible.
• Monday: Increasing clouds; high 26°. AM snow showers possible.
• Tuesday: Mostly sunny; high 30°.
• Wednesday: Partly sunny; high 41°.
• Thursday: Partly sunny; high 43°.





