Lots of wind, rain, maybe hail? Timing Sacramento’s Christmas weather forecast
The second of two atmospheric storms to rake across California will bring high winds to much of the Sacramento Valley and Sierra foothills through the Christmas holiday.
A high wind warning has been issued across much of Northern California as National Weather Service forecasters said winds gusts as high as 60 mph are expected.
The warning begins at 4 p.m. Tuesday and lasts through 4 p.m. Thursday, the weather service’s Sacramento office said.
Winds from the south of 25 to 35 mph are expected but meteorologists are warning of higher gusts through the 48-hour stretch.
“We have two bursts of high winds expected,” said Courtney Carpenter, a weather service meteorologist.
She said the strongest gusts will be Tuesday night through Wednesday morning before winds pick up again Wednesday night through Thursday morning.
The warning covers all of the Sacramento Valley and the northern half of the San Joaquin Valley from Redding to Modesto. Foothill and mountain communities, such as the Mother Lode, as well as Mendocino and Lake counties will also see high winds.
“Strong winds and saturated soils could blow down trees and power lines resulting in widespread power outages,” the agency said in its advisory.
The forecast also calls for the outside possibility of hail and funnel clouds in some Valley spots.
Winds also may damage loose items and holiday decorations, the weather service said. “Difficult travel conditions” are expected.
“Watch for falling debris and tree limbs,” the agency warned. “Use caution if you must drive. Take time now to prepare for potential power outages.”
Winds should decrease during the day Thursday and return to normal by Friday, Carpenter said.
“It will still be a little breezy,” she said.
More rain forecast
Northern California also will see periodic heavy rainfall through Christmas Day, coming in two waves Wednesday and Thursday mornings, Carpenter said.
The region can expect from 1.5 to 2.5 inches of rain through Friday, she said.
The Sierra Nevada mountains can expect up to a foot of snow above 4,500 feet and 4 to 8 feet of snow above 5,500 feet, the weather service said.
Thunderstorms are also possible along the coast, the weather service’s California-Nevada River Forecast Center said.
The wind and rain are courtesy of the last in a series of atmospheric river storms hitting Northern California, Carpenter said.
This story was originally published December 23, 2025 at 12:00 PM.
