SNOW DAY PREDICTION FOR TRAVERSE CITY, MI

Wednesday morning May 20, 2026
AI SUMMARY

Traverse City, MI Snow Day Likelihood: 86% - Likely Closed

Very high risk of a snow day. Heavy snow (9.5") is forecast for the morning commute with dangerous road conditions and sub-freezing temps.

Check your district's official app early tomorrow morning.
OUR PREDICTION
0%
COMMUNITY PREDICTION

Vote: Will school be closed tomorrow?

WEDNESDAY'S PREDICTION TREND

Did you know? Snowfall forecasts update constantly as new weather data comes in. This chart shows how the school closing prediction has evolved throughout the night as conditions change. Check back every hour to see if it's changed!

0% 25% 50% 75% 100% 10PM12AM2AM4AM6AM
HOURLY SNOWFALL
2.5mm (Moderate) 5.0mm 7.5mm (Heavy) 10.0mm 4AM5AM6AM7AM8AM9AM10AM11AM12PM1PM2PM3PM4PM
THE #1 SNOW DAY CALCULATOR FOR TRAVERSE CITY

Winter decisions in Traverse City depend on more than snowfall totals, so this page focuses on commute-hour hazards, freezing surfaces, and local closure behavior. Families tracking multiple districts often start with a broader regional view before narrowing down to this city.

If your household commutes across city lines, compare this forecast with Ann Arbor school snow day calculator to spot timing differences before morning announcements.

Families also use this page as a local tracker to monitor school closure trends before morning district decisions.

Frequently Asked Questions About Snow Day Calculator in Traverse City

Key inputs include pre-dawn precipitation timing, below-freezing pavement potential, and transportation risk across district routes in and around Traverse City.

Yes. As forecast data changes, the probability can move before morning announcements, especially during active snow bands or mixed precipitation events.

Cross-city checks help families commuting across district lines understand whether risk is concentrated or spread across the wider metro area.

Mixed precipitation followed by a freeze can be highly disruptive because traction drops quickly even when totals are not extreme.

Yes. It provides a planning-oriented probability so households can prepare backup schedules before final district communication.

Note

Some people search misspellings like "snow day calvulator" or "couculater," but this page uses the correct terms and links for clearer school-closure forecasting.