A powerful Arctic blast driven by frigid air from Canada’s polar vortex is surging into the United States, setting up the coldest stretch of the season for nearly two-thirds of the country. Forecasters say this will be the week’s deepest freeze, bringing dangerous wind chills, record-challenging lows and widespread subzero mornings.
Northern Montana has already endured wind chills 20–30°F below zero, with cold weather alerts warning of life-threatening exposure. Cities like Chicago and Minneapolis are expected to stay below freezing for days, struggling to reach even single-digit highs as the Arctic outbreak intensifies.
La Niña Strengthens the Arctic Impact
Meteorologists say the current La Niña pattern is amplifying the cold plunge, creating conditions more typical of early February—even though winter has barely begun. The setup matches seasonal forecasts calling for a colder, snowier start.
The freeze follows a recent Midwest snowstorm that dropped up to a foot of snow over Thanksgiving. That fresh snowpack is now accelerating the cold by reflecting sunlight and reinforcing the Arctic air mass. Another system pushing east from the Rockies may add more snow on top of the freezing conditions.
When the Arctic Blast Hits: Regional Breakdown
Upper Midwest & Northern Plains – Thursday Morning
The most extreme cold arrives Thursday, with widespread subzero lows expected across:
- Iowa
- Dakotas
- Minnesota
- Wisconsin
Forecast lows:
- Des Moines: –11°F
- Cedar Rapids: –7°F
- Sioux City & Waterloo: chasing all-time December records
Wind chills will plummet to life-threatening levels, creating dangerous conditions for travelers and increasing the risk of frozen pipes from Montana to Nebraska.
Other projected lows:
- Chicago: 5°F
- Green Bay: –1°F
- Kansas City: 8°F
Highs will remain in the teens at best—20–30°F below normal.
Great Lakes & East Coast – Friday
The Arctic air shifts east Friday, gripping the I-95 corridor with a sharp freeze:
- Midwest to Great Lakes: single-digit lows
- I-95 cities: upper teens to 20s
Record-chasing cities include:
- Pittsburgh
- New York
- Indianapolis
- Baltimore
Chicago may fall to 1°F, Detroit to 8°F, and Portland, Maine is also in contention for record lows. Farther south, parts of the lower Mississippi Valley may see light freezing rain at the edge of the Arctic air mass.



