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Wichita Falls Weather Radar
Wichita Falls Live Weather
Wichita Falls Live Weather Radar
Wichita Falls Hourly Weather Forecast
Wichita Falls 7-Day Weather Forecast
Wichita Falls Weather Overview
Wichita Falls sits in North Texas about 15 miles south of Oklahoma, where dryline collisions and Gulf moisture make Wichita Falls weather radar part of daily storm watching from spring into early summer. The city has a humid-subtropical climate, but it runs hotter than many places in the region. NOAA normals show 27.89 inches of precipitation a year and 3.1 inches of snow, so Wichita Falls weather radar matters more for hail, wind, and sudden heavy rain than for long winter storms.
Tornado risk is the headline concern. The 1979 Terrible Tuesday tornado killed 42 people, injured about 1,800, and left 20,000 residents homeless. An earlier F5 tornado on April 3, 1964 killed 7 people and injured more than 100. During severe weather season, Wichita Falls weather radar helps track supercells, hail cores, and fast-moving warning polygons across the metro and Sheppard Air Force Base. The National Weather Service office serving the area is WFO OUN in Norman, Oklahoma, so Wichita Falls weather radar is especially useful when Norman issues watches for North Texas.
Heat is the other major issue. Wichita Falls reached 117°F on June 28, 1980, and the 2011 drought brought 100 days of 100°F or higher. Flash flooding can still hit hard when storm clusters stall; May 2015 dumped 17.00 inches of rain, the wettest month on record. That mix makes Wichita Falls weather radar useful year-round, whether you are watching a thunderstorm, checking if another brutal heat day stays dry, or timing a drive across town.
Wichita Falls Weather Risks & Safety
Tornado Risk
Tornadoes hit Wichita Falls 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. Wichita Falls 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 Wichita Falls 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 Wichita Falls, get indoors and away from windows until it passes.
Flash Flood Risk
The terrain around Wichita Falls 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 Wichita Falls area, move to higher ground immediately. Don't wait to see the water rise.
Extreme Heat Risk
Summers in Wichita Falls get dangerously hot — heat indices regularly push past 100°F, and heat waves can last for weeks. When the radar shows clear skies with no storm activity for days, that usually means the heat is building. Outdoor workers, elderly residents, and anyone without reliable AC are most at risk. Stay hydrated, avoid outdoor activity during peak afternoon hours, and check on neighbors who might be struggling.
How to Use Wichita Falls Weather Radar
Check the latest North Texas setup
Start with current conditions, then look west and northwest of Wichita Falls for dryline storms building toward the city. Spring cells can move fast across North Texas and southern Oklahoma.
Animate the radar before you drive
Play the Wichita Falls radar loop and watch how rain and hail cores are tracking toward Kell Boulevard, I-44, or Sheppard Air Force Base before heading out.
Compare radar with the hourly forecast
Use the hourly forecast to see whether a warning line keeps its strength after sunset or if heat and wind stay dominant instead of storms.
Recheck during heat or flood alerts
In summer, come back often. Wichita Falls can flip from blazing heat to a flooding thunderstorm quickly, especially when stalled cells keep dumping rain.
Who Benefits from Wichita Falls Weather Radar
Commuters & Drivers
Check I-44 and Kell Boulevard before storms or hail roll across Wichita Falls.
Outdoor Enthusiasts
Lucy Park and the Circle Trail are better when you spot storms 30 minutes early.
Event Planners & Families
Kay Yeager Coliseum plans get easier when radar shows exact storm timing downtown.
Outdoor Workers
Sheppard Air Force Base crews and field teams need fast radar checks in spring.
