
Strong Storms Possible Across Rowan County This Afternoon and Evening
ROWAN COUNTY, N.C. (Monday, July 6, 2026) — Another hot and humid summer day is expected across Rowan County, but the biggest weather story will be the potential for strong to locally severe thunderstorms later this afternoon and this evening.
The Storm Prediction Center (SPC) continues to place Rowan County under a Marginal Risk (Level 1 of 5) for severe thunderstorms today. While widespread severe weather is not expected, a few storms could become strong enough to produce damaging wind gusts, which remains the primary hazard.
Hot and Humid Before Storms Develop
Most of the day will feature partly to mostly sunny skies with temperatures climbing into the mid-90s. Combined with high humidity, it will feel closer to 100 degrees during the afternoon.
Anyone spending time outdoors should stay hydrated, take frequent breaks, and never leave children or pets unattended inside vehicles, where temperatures can become life-threatening in just a matter of minutes.
Storm Development Expected Late Today
A weak upper-level disturbance moving across the eastern United States, combined with abundant Gulf moisture and daytime heating, will help trigger scattered thunderstorms during the late afternoon and evening.
Storms are expected to develop after 4:00 to 5:00 PM, with activity gradually diminishing after sunset and ending around or shortly after midnight.
Not everyone will receive rainfall today, but any storm that develops could become briefly strong.
Primary Threat: Damaging Wind Gusts
According to the SPC's Day 1 Wind Outlook, Rowan County is included within a 5% probability area for damaging thunderstorm wind gusts.
While tornadoes and large hail are not expected to be widespread concerns, isolated storms could produce:
- Wind gusts over 50 to 60 mph
- Frequent cloud-to-ground lightning
- Torrential rainfall that could briefly reduce visibility
- Localized flooding in poor drainage and low-lying areas
The strongest storms will likely be driven by collapsing thunderstorm cores and outflow boundaries rather than organized severe weather systems.
Why Severe Weather Isn't More Widespread
Today's atmosphere contains plenty of heat and moisture to fuel thunderstorms, but wind shear remains relatively weak.
That means storms are expected to remain somewhat disorganized, developing into clusters that pulse up quickly before weakening. However, these "pulse" storms are often capable of producing sudden damaging wind gusts as they collapse.
Timing
Morning
- Patchy fog early
- Mostly sunny and increasingly humid
Afternoon (3 PM–6 PM)
- Isolated thunderstorms begin developing
- Temperatures peak in the mid-90s
- Heat index near 100°
Evening (5 PM–10 PM)
- Greatest coverage of showers and thunderstorms
- A few storms may become strong
- Heavy rain, lightning, and damaging wind gusts possible
Late Evening into Overnight
- Storms gradually weaken and move out
- Warm and muggy with lows around 71°
Looking Ahead
Daily afternoon thunderstorm chances continue through much of the workweek, although coverage should become a little more isolated from Wednesday through Friday. Another cold front is expected to approach next weekend, bringing another increase in shower and thunderstorm chances.
While today's severe weather threat remains on the lower end of the scale, everyone should remain weather aware during the late afternoon and evening hours.
Rowan County Weather Safety Tips
- Have multiple ways to receive weather warnings.
- Move indoors immediately if thunder is heard.
- Secure loose outdoor items that could be blown around by strong winds.
- Never drive through flooded roadways.
- Continue practicing heat safety before storms develop this afternoon.
Bottom Line: Most of Rowan County will experience another hot summer day, but scattered thunderstorms developing late this afternoon and evening could produce damaging wind gusts, torrential rainfall, and dangerous lightning. Stay weather aware if you have outdoor plans.