Texas – A quiet stretch is ending quickly across North Texas, as a developing storm pattern is set to bring multiple rounds of thunderstorms, including the risk for severe weather, starting as early as Saturday.
According to the National Weather Service in Fort Worth, a dryline setting up west of the region will act as a trigger for strong to severe storms each day through early next week. The greatest risk begins Saturday afternoon and continues into Sunday and Monday across the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex.
Storm threats include damaging wind gusts, large hail, and isolated tornado potential. Areas west of I-35, including Graham, Cisco, and parts of western North Texas, may see the earliest and strongest development before storms track east toward DFW.
By Saturday afternoon, storms could rapidly intensify, especially along and west of the I-35 corridor. Travel on major routes including I-20, I-30, and US-287 may be impacted by sudden heavy rain and reduced visibility.
Sunday and Monday continue the pattern, with repeated storm chances and a continued severe risk. Confidence remains lower on exact timing, but conditions favor multiple rounds of storms.
Residents should review severe weather plans now, ensure alerts are enabled, and be prepared to act quickly if warnings are issued.
Looking ahead, this active pattern may persist into early next week before conditions begin to stabilize later in the period.




