Live snowpack across the country.
Real-time SNOTEL depths, fresh snowfall over the past 24 hours, and 5-day forecasts at every monitored peak. Daily AI briefing summarises the picture in one paragraph — refreshed throughout the day from USDA NRCS and NOAA NOHRSC feeds.
What the snow's doing right now
An AI-generated summary stitched from today's SNOTEL readings, NOHRSC analysis fields, and NWS snow alerts.
Snow enthusiasts looking for the most substantial accumulations should turn their attention northward to Alaska's remote Arctic regions, where a dynamic weather system is poised to deliver impressive snowfall over the next 48 hours. While the Lower 48 has seen only modest 2-inch accumulations at isolated monitoring stations in Washington's Cascade Range and Colorado's San Juan Mountains over the past day, Alaska's North Slope is preparing for considerably more action. Imnaviat Creek leads the forecast with an expected 6 inches of snow accompanied by rain/snow mix and areas of fog, while nearby Atigun Pass—a critical corridor along the Dalton Highway—anticipates 4 inches amid freezing fog conditions that will challenge travelers navigating this already treacherous route.
The Pacific Northwest's Sawmill Ridge station near Washington's Cascade crest reported 2 inches of new snow in the past 24 hours atop a healthy 170-inch base, though the immediate forecast turns less favorable with hazy conditions giving way to potential thunderstorms—a typical late-season pattern that brings mixed precipitation rather than the powder snow winter enthusiasts crave. Colorado's Vallecito monitoring site in the San Juans also logged 2 inches, but with only a 3-inch base and showers transitioning to thunderstorms, this represents the tail end of the season rather than any significant winter weather event. These modest totals across major Western mountain ranges underscore that the primary snow action has definitively shifted to higher latitudes.
The real story unfolds across Alaska's Brooks Range and North Slope, where maritime moisture colliding with Arctic air masses creates ideal conditions for accumulating snow. Prudhoe Bay, situated at 70 degrees north latitude along the Arctic Ocean, expects 2 inches with a chance of rain/snow mix transitioning to rain—highlighting the marginal temperatures even in these far northern reaches. The combination of fresh snow, freezing fog, and mixed precipitation across Atigun Pass presents particularly hazardous conditions for the limited traffic servicing Alaska's North Slope oil fields. For researchers and snow climatologists, these Arctic accumulations represent valuable late-season data points, while backcountry enthusiasts eyeing Alaska's remote terrain should note that even modest snowfall in these regions often comes with significant wind transport and blowing snow that creates deeper accumulations in sheltered alpine bowls.
Fresh snowfall ranking
Where the storm dropped overnight. Sorted by reported new snow over the past 24 hours.
| Station / Resort | Air temp | Snowfall (24h) |
|---|---|---|
| Cuchara Mountain Resort | 51°F | 1" |
| Mt. Bachelor | 62°F | 1" |
| Jackson Hole Mountain Resort | 60°F | 1" |
| Snow King Ski Area | 60°F | 1" |
| Snowbird Ski And Summer Resort | 59°F | 1" |
| Alyeska Resort | 47°F | — |
| Arctic Valley | 40°F | — |
| Bartlett High School Cross Country Ski Trails | 40°F | — |
| Campbell Airstrip Cross Country Ski Trails | 40°F | — |
| Eagle River High School Cross Country Ski Trails | 40°F | — |
| Eaglecrest Ski Area | 49°F | — |
| Hillside Cross Country Ski Trails | 40°F | — |
| Hilltop Ski Area | 40°F | — |
| Kincaid Park Cross Country Ski Trails | 48°F | — |
| Manitoba Mountain | 28°F | — |
Top 5-day snow forecasts
Where the next storm cycle is loading up. Sorted by total expected snowfall over the next 5 days.
| Station / Resort | Air temp | Forecast (5d) |
|---|---|---|
| Manitoba Mountain | 28°F | 17" |
| Kendall Mountain | 40°F | 4" |
| Telluride | 40°F | 4" |
| Soldier Mountain | 55°F | 0" |
| Alyeska Resort | 47°F | — |
| Arctic Valley | 40°F | — |
| Bartlett High School Cross Country Ski Trails | 40°F | — |
| Campbell Airstrip Cross Country Ski Trails | 40°F | — |
| Eagle River High School Cross Country Ski Trails | 40°F | — |
| Eaglecrest Ski Area | 49°F | — |
| Hillside Cross Country Ski Trails | 40°F | — |
| Hilltop Ski Area | 40°F | — |
| Kincaid Park Cross Country Ski Trails | 48°F | — |
| Moose Mountain | 40°F | — |
| Mt. Eyak | 46°F | — |
About the snow data
What's a SNOTEL station?
SNOpack TELemetry — automated stations operated by the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS). Each one continuously measures snow depth, snow water equivalent (SWE), precipitation, and air temperature. There are 800+ across the western U.S. and Alaska. They're the gold-standard snowpack measurement.
How fresh is the data?
SNOTEL stations transmit hourly. We re-pull every hour and re-rank the leaders. The AI briefing regenerates daily.
What's snow water equivalent (SWE)?
The depth of water you'd get if you melted the entire snowpack. A 30-inch snowpack with 8 inches of SWE is wetter and denser than one with 5 inches of SWE — useful for water-supply forecasting and avalanche assessment.
Where do the 5-day forecasts come from?
NOAA's National Operational Hydrologic Remote Sensing Center (NOHRSC) snow analysis fields plus standard NWS forecast guidance. We aggregate by SNOTEL location and rank by total expected accumulation.
Can I get an alert when fresh snow falls?
Yes. Save any SNOTEL station as a favorite in the Snoflo iOS app, set a fresh-snow threshold (e.g. "alert me on 6+ inches new snow"), and you'll get a push the moment it crosses. Free with a Snoflo account.
Is this a substitute for the local avalanche center?
No. For backcountry travel always consult your regional avalanche forecast (avalanche.org). Snoflo is informational data only.
Snowpack by state
Tap any western state for SNOTEL stations, fresh snowfall, and 5-day forecasts focused on that state.