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  • 4 hours ago
The severe weather season of 2026 is experiencing nearly three times the historical average for the frequency of events, as reported by the National Weather Service. The Chicago area alone has recorded eleven major severe weather incidents before April 19, compared to an average of just four for the entire January to April timeframe. This season has already witnessed an EF-3 tornado and a state-record hailstone measuring over six inches in diameter. Meteorologists are cautioning that the trend of unusually high tornado and storm activity is persisting into late May, with no indications of a slowdown as we approach the peak season.

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00:00The 2026 severe weather season is not just active.
00:03It is historic.
00:05The National Weather Service reports the Chicago forecast area alone
00:09has logged 11 major severe weather events before mid-April.
00:13The average for that entire period is just four.
00:16The season already produced an EF3 tornado and a new state record for hail.
00:21A stone exceeding six inches across.
00:24That is larger than a softball.
00:26Nationwide, AccuWeather warns this year's highest hail risk zone
00:30stretches from Texas to Alabama,
00:33with another hotspot from Iowa through northeastern Kansas.
00:36Meanwhile, a major active pattern continues right now,
00:40with multiple storm rounds hitting the high plains and deep south
00:43this Memorial Day weekend.
00:46Meteorologists say do not let a quiet day fool you.
00:49This season will have more outbreaks ahead.
00:51Get your severe weather plan updated now.
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