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Will it snow in Leven, East Riding Of Yorkshire?

See the 14 day snow forecast, including snowfall probabilities derived from multiple weather models.

Short range

Will it snow today, tomorrow or the day after?

Wed 03 Jun
0%
Thu 04 Jun
0%
Fri 05 Jun
0%

Medium range

Will it snow during the following ten days?

Sat 06 Jun
0%
Sun 07 Jun
0%
Mon 08 Jun
0%
Tue 09 Jun
0%
Wed 10 Jun
0%
Thu 11 Jun
0%
Fri 12 Jun
0%
Sat 13 Jun
0%
Sun 14 Jun
0%
Mon 15 Jun
0%

Will the snow settle?

The forecast above indicates whether snow is likely to fall. However, predicting whether it will accumulate is even more challenging. Several tools on the website can help with this, but for the next five days the UKV snow depth forecast charts may be particularly useful.

If you are looking for more information check out the Snow forecasting tools article.

Other will it forecasts

Leven, East Riding Of Yorkshire frost

Leven, East Riding Of Yorkshire rain

Leven, East Riding Of Yorkshire snow

Leven, East Riding Of Yorkshire heat

Leven, East Riding Of Yorkshire thunder

Full weather forecast

Next 3 days hour by hour

Leven, East Riding Of Yorkshire hourly

Next 16 days in 3 hour intervals

Leven, East Riding Of Yorkshire 16 day

Select location

UK postcode or place

What is needed for snow?

In the UK conditions are often marginal for snow, so a number of factors need to align. Just being cold isn't always enough!

For snow to fall and settle you generally need three key ingredients:

1. Cold Air Aloft: The air high up in the atmosphere must be cold enough. Temperatures there need to be at or below freezing (0°C). If it's warmer aloft precipitation will fall as rain even if it's freezing at the ground. A cold air mass is most likely when winds blow from a northerly or easterly direction.

2. Cold Air at the Surface: Temperatures at ground level generally need to be 2°C or lower. However, it can sometimes snow at higher temperatures, particularly if the air is very dry.

3. Enough Moisture: A cold snap on its own isn't enough; there must be moisture in the air to form clouds and precipitation. This is why a cold northerly wind often brings dry weather to southern Britain, while snow showers develop in the north and near coasts where the wind picks up moisture.

This combination is why snow in the UK is most common in the north and over higher ground where these conditions are met more often.

Want to learn more? See the UK Met Office guide on How does snow form? and the Wikipedia entry Snow.

Information

The snow forecast updates four times each day.

It combines data from the Meteo France Arpege, NCEP Global Forecast System (GFS) and NCEP Global Ensemble Forecast System (GEFS).

If you would like more in-depth information check our extensive range of Numerical Weather Prediction model data

To check the complete weather forecast use the Place, postcode or geolocation options in the header.