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Cold Front Brings Bay Area Rain, Sierra Nevada Snow

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Tourist observe the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco on Feb. 16, 2026. Warm weather in the Bay Area gives way to cooler temperatures and rain, along with snow in the Sierra Nevada, as a cold front moves over Northern California.  (Giselle Garza Lerma/San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images)

The warm weather that lit up Dolores Park this weekend, where thousands celebrated the Hunky Jesus and Foxy Mary contest, is about to take a turn.

National Weather Service forecasters expect a cold front to move over the region, bringing cooler temperatures and rain across the Bay Area, with potential snow in the Sierra Nevada.

By Wednesday, temperatures will drop to normal springtime averages. Temperatures along the coast will be in the 60s and 70s inland, said Rachel Kennedy, a meteorologist with the weather service’s Bay Area office.

“It’s just not going to be as warm as it’s been recently,” Kennedy said.

The cold storm building from the Gulf of Alaska could also deliver about a quarter inch of rain in low-lying areas and up to three-quarters of an inch at higher elevations on Thursday and Friday, Kennedy said.

“It looks like we’re going to have a couple of rainy days in store for us at the end of this week and into the start of next week,” Kennedy said. “If you’re a rain lover, like me, then you’re happy about it.”

Light snow is seen on the meadow where the California Department of Water Resources prepares to conduct the fourth media snow survey of the 2026 season at Phillips Station in the Sierra Nevada on April 1, 2026. (Andrew Nixon/California Department of Water Resources)

The frigid storm may add much-needed snow to the state’s meager snowpack, sitting at 18% of normal for this time of year. Dakari Anderson, a meteorologist with the weather service’s Sacramento office, said up to 10 inches of snow could fall on the highest peaks.

But he notes, “we’re expecting a lesser amount than we saw with this last wave during a storm about a week ago.”

Anderson said it’s hard to say if the cooldown will last beyond the weekend. But when looking at the eight-to-10-day outlook, he expects above-average temperatures to return to the area.

“We’re forecasting warmer temperatures,” Anderson said, “but exactly how warm? It would be a little bit hard to say right now.”

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