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El Paso Weather Radar
El Paso Live Weather
El Paso Live Weather Radar
El Paso Hourly Weather Forecast
El Paso 7-Day Weather Forecast
El Paso Weather Overview
El Paso weather radar is more useful when you read it with the local map in mind. El Paso sits in El Paso County. Compare cells near El Paso city center, radar station KEPZ, and El Paso County neighborhoods before you trust a broad regional forecast. A small storm cell can still matter here. It might miss one side of El Paso County but hit a commute route, work site, school pickup, or outdoor event. Watch rain that develops near El Paso city center, where runoff and low clouds can change conditions fast.
Around El Paso, the map is shaped by El Paso city center, radar station KEPZ, and El Paso County neighborhoods. Watch for heavy rain, localized flooding, and flash-flood risk, thunderstorms and outflow winds, and tornado-warned cells. Alerts and forecast zones usually come through WFO EPZ and radar station KEPZ. Pair the map with NWS watches and warnings when storms strengthen, because radar shows motion while alerts explain the threat. If cells are building near El Paso County, check their direction before assuming conditions will stay quiet across town.
Seasonality changes the radar check. In spring, watch for severe thunderstorms, hail, and fast-changing radar returns. Summer is different: track tropical remnants and heavy rain bands. Fall often brings leftover tropical moisture and heavy-rain setups, while winter can bring cold rain, fog, wet roads, or gusty north winds. Check more often on unstable days. That seasonal mix is why local radar checks in El Paso need more context than a statewide forecast.
Local geography changes how the radar should be read. Use the local radar station, county alerts, and named neighborhoods as anchors instead of vague road references. El Paso city center helps outdoor users judge whether nearby rain is moving toward them or sliding past. For El Paso, that local detail matters more than a broad statewide view because storms can affect one corridor while another stays dry.
What matters first changes by season. Around El Paso, start with heavy rain, localized flooding, and flash-flood risk, thunderstorms and outflow winds, and tornado-warned cells. In spring, the map can help spot runoff-producing rain. In summer and early fall, radar helps with outflow boundaries and fast-building storms. In winter, check whether ponding water, gusty wind, or poor visibility may affect local travel corridors before heading out.
For daily use, start with the live radar, then compare it with the next few hours. Use KEPZ as a radar reference point instead of guessing from a distant city. If storms are moving faster than expected, the 7-day forecast will not show every short-term change; the radar loop is the better tool for timing rain, nearby thunderstorms, and visibility changes near El Paso.
Before leaving, open the El Paso radar and check the direction of nearby cells. Then compare it with the hourly forecast. If storms are moving toward El Paso County, give yourself more time, choose a safer route, or wait until the strongest returns pass. Simple, but useful.
Data sources used for this page include WFO EPZ, NWS forecast grid, RainViewer radar imagery, Open-Meteo forecast data, and OpenStreetMap local geography. No single source tells the whole story. Together, they keep the page grounded in local geography and current forecast data.
El Paso Weather Risks & Safety
Hurricane & Tropical Storm Risk
El Paso sits in the path of Atlantic and Gulf tropical systems. Hurricane season runs June 1 through November 30, peaking in August and September when warm sea surface temperatures fuel rapid intensification. On the radar, you can track the eye wall, rain bands, and embedded tornadoes as a storm approaches. If you live in El Paso, keep your evacuation plan current and check the radar frequently once a tropical advisory is issued.
Tornado Risk
Tornadoes hit El Paso hardest in spring and early summer, when warm Gulf air slams into cooler northern fronts. Supercell thunderstorms can spin up EF2+ tornadoes with very little lead time. On radar, rotation signatures inside storm cells give you a few critical minutes to reach shelter. El Paso averages several tornado warnings per year — know where your safe room or interior closet is before you need it.
Severe Thunderstorm Risk
Severe thunderstorms roll through El Paso regularly, especially spring through early fall. Expect damaging winds above 58 mph, large hail, and dangerous lightning. The radar shows you each storm cell's position, movement, and intensity — so you can tell if one is headed your way. When a thunderstorm warning drops for El Paso, get indoors and away from windows until it passes.
Flooding & Flash Flood Risk
Flash flooding is El Paso's most persistent weather hazard. Slow-moving thunderstorms or tropical moisture can dump enough rain to overwhelm drainage systems within hours — especially in paved urban areas where water has nowhere to go. Check the radar to see where the heaviest rain is falling and which areas to avoid. The standing rule: turn around, don't drown. Never drive through flooded roads, even if they look shallow.
Flash Flood Risk
The terrain around El Paso funnels rainfall fast — canyon drainages, dry washes, and paved surfaces concentrate water into flows that can sweep away vehicles within minutes. The radar shows real-time rainfall rates, so you can see where the heaviest rain is falling and whether flash flood conditions are building near you. When a flash flood warning hits the El Paso area, move to higher ground immediately. Don't wait to see the water rise.
How to Use El Paso Weather Radar
Check the El Paso radar first
Start with the live radar before reading the longer forecast. Look for cells near El Paso city center, then compare their direction with your location in El Paso.
Compare radar with hourly timing
Use the hourly panel to see whether rain or storms are expected to last. Radar shows what is happening now; hourly data helps with the next few hours.
Plan around local routes
Before driving the most important local route, check whether precipitation is moving across the route or forming nearby. Small radar cells can still slow traffic or outdoor work.
Recheck during alerts
When WFO EPZ issues watches or warnings, refresh the radar more often. Conditions can change faster than a daily forecast suggests.
Who Benefits from El Paso Weather Radar
Commuters & Drivers
Drivers on local roads can check storm timing before leaving.
Outdoor Enthusiasts
People near El Paso city center can watch rain and nearby thunderstorms before heading out.
Event Planners & Families
Families and event planners can compare radar with hourly changes.
Outdoor Workers
Outdoor crews can time breaks around tropical remnants and heavy rain bands.
