New York City’s first accumulating snow is looking like a near certainty this weekend.
The National Weather Service has issued a winter weather advisory for New York City, Long Island and much of Central and South New Jersey for Saturday night into Sunday morning.
It won’t be a blockbuster snow event, but snow lovers should be delighted nonetheless. In the city, people will wake up Sunday morning to around two inches of fresh snow on the ground. Expect less farther inland and more on eastern Long Island and down the Jersey Shore.

Highest totals will be around 4 inches or so, with isolated higher amounts.
So when does it all start?
Precipitation from the storm moves in late Saturday evening and could start as rain at the immediate coast. Saturday temperatures will be above freezing. But temperatures will quickly dip to freezing or slightly below overnight, when the brunt of the precipitation falls, and that means it will change over to snow.
Don’t be surprised to see a crisp layer of white outside your window when waking up Sunday morning!

Typically, New York City gets its first measurable snow sometime during the second week of December, so Sunday morning’s snow is right on schedule.
The last measurable snow in NYC was on Feb. 20, 2025 — almost 300 days ago! The last inch of snow on record was a little over a week before that, on Feb. 11.
Temperatures will largely remain below freezing into early next week, so whatever snow does accumulate, it’ll stick around for everyone to enjoy for at least a couple of days before we hit a warm spell and the snow melts away.


When will storm hit? See hourly radar breakdown
Many can expect to see precipitation start Saturday night, though it won’t turn over to rain until the overnight hours. How long will it stick around for?
See an hourly breakdown as the storm:
9 p.m. Saturday:

12 a.m. Sunday:

3 a.m. Sunday:

7 a.m. Sunday:

10 a.m. Sunday:



