Tuesday June 9 2026 Forecast (7:28AM)

DAYS 1-5 (JUNE 9-13)

High pressure sinks southward and turns our air flow westerly today, which will be fair, warm, and dry. Midweek brings higher humidity as the high stays to the south and feeds more moisture and warmth into the region, while a trough moving in from the west brings an increase shower and thunderstorm chance. We’ll have a nosing in of high pressure from Atlantic Canada on Friday to cool the coast and get rid of shower and t-storm chances with the exception of a possible pop up shower or storm over inland areas. A weakening cold front will moving west to east across the region late Friday night to about midday Saturday, bringing the chance of a few showers and thunderstorms along it, but activity looks limited.

TODAY: Sunny. Highs 80-87 except 73-80 South Coast. Wind W to SW 5-15 MPH.

TONIGHT: Clear. Lows 57-64. Wind SW up to 10 MPH.

WEDNESDAY: Sun followed by clouds. A shower and thunderstorm chance in the afternoon and evening. Highs 81-88. Dew point climbs over 60. Wind SW to S around 10 MPH, could gusts to 15 MPH.

WEDNESDAY NIGHT: Partly cloudy. An isolated shower possible. Fog patches favoring interior lower elevations. Lows 63-70. Dew point 60+.

THURSDAY: Partly sunny. Isolated to scattered showers and thunderstorms possible. Highs 83-90 except cooler South Coast / Cape Cod. Dew point in 60s. Wind SW 5-15 MPH.

THURSDAY NIGHT: Clearing. Patchy fog. Lows 60-67. Dew point near 60. Wind W under 10 MPH.

FRIDAY: Sun and fair-weather clouds. Only a slight risk of a pop-up shower or thunderstorm inland in the afternoon. Highs 75-82 coast, 83-90 inland. Dew point near 60. Wind variable to E 5-15 MPH.

FRIDAY NIGHT: Partly cloudy evening. Mostly cloudy with a shower or thunderstorm possible overnight, favoring western areas. Lows 62-69. Dew point near 60. Wind variable to S up to 10 MPH.

SATURDAY: Variably cloudy. A shower or thunderstorm possible in the morning, favoring eastern areas. Highs 82-89. Dew point near 60. Wind S up to 10 MPH shifting to W.

DAYS 6-10 (JUNE 14-18)

Lower humidity, a breeze, but very warm weather with a west to northwest flow for June 14. The period June 15-17 presents occasional shower and thunderstorm chances with higher humidity – many details to be worked out here. Fair weather expected to return at the end of the period.

DAYS 11-15 (JUNE 19-23)

Leaning toward fair weather early to mid period and unsettled / humid weather later in the period, but there is a lot of inconsistency and uncertainty in medium range guidance so keeping the outlook very general at this point. The summer solstice occurs at 4:24 a.m. EDT on June 21.

45 thoughts on “Tuesday June 9 2026 Forecast (7:28AM)”

  1. Good morning and thank you TK.

    65 up from 59

    Ocean: 56

    Wordle; 4

    Another beauty of a day on tap.

  2. Thanks!

    Wordle 3 today, Sea of Green. 3 and 4 first guess, added 2nd letter on 2 which left an easy guess on 3

  3. Thanks TK
    This day in weather history goes back to the Worcester tornado in 1953. A tornado which was on the ground for a long time.

  4. It is rare for a tornado in New England to be on the ground for a long period of time as that tornado was. I believe it was an F4 tornado.

    1. There was some talk of reclassifying that tornado, but ultimately it remained a high end EF-4.

      Info:

      No, the 1953 Worcester, Massachusetts tornado was never officially upgraded to an F-5 or EF-5, and it remains classified as a high-end F-4.The National Weather Service officially rates and debates the intensity of this tornado based on the following:Why it was debated: The tornado scoured neighborhoods and swept entire rows of homes completely clean to their foundations, which is often characteristic of F-5 damage.The 2005 NWS Review: The National Weather Service convened a panel of meteorological and engineering experts in 2005 to review whether the storm should be reclassified. They ultimately decided to keep the F-4 rating.The Reason: The panel determined that many of the destroyed postwar homes lacked secure anchoring to their foundations. Because the exact construction quality and anchoring techniques of the time could not be verified, engineers could not definitively rule out structural failure, leaving the rating at a strong F-4.

    2. The 2011 Springfield tornado also was on the ground a long time, but the Worcester one was longer

      The 1954/1953 Worcester, MA tornado was on the ground significantly longer than the 2011 Springfield, MA tornado.The Worcester, MA tornado touched down on June 9, 1953 (often confused with 1954 in local lore) and stayed on the ground for roughly 78 to 84 minutes, carving a 48-mile path. By comparison, the Springfield, MA tornado on June 1, 2011 stayed on the ground for 70 minutes, cutting a path of roughly 38 to 39

  5. I renamed the “South Coast” to the “South Coats” on today’s blog, but I didn’t like it, so U changed it back. 😉

    P.S. thanks proofreader! 🙂

    1. I caught that right away, but wasn’t going to bother you as we ALL knew what you meant.

    2. We do need your coats this evening with this gusty but refreshing sea breeze

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