Santa Fe, New Mexico Snow Day Calculator
Real-time probability that schools in Santa Fe, New Mexico will be cancelled tomorrow, based on live forecast data and local closure thresholds.
It's 69°F — no snow day expected.
Real-time probability that schools in Santa Fe, New Mexico will be cancelled tomorrow, based on live forecast data and local closure thresholds.
It's 69°F — no snow day expected.
6–12 inches of wet snow
Santa Fe gets significant snowfall but also gets rapid clearing from dry air and Chinook winds. A foot of snow can fall and melt in 24–48 hours — which means districts here focus on the melt-freeze cycle (overnight ice on roads cleared yesterday) as much as on fresh accumulation. Temperature swings of 40–60°F in a single day are normal, and that's what actually determines road conditions in the morning.
Santa Fe sits at elevation, which means the air is drier and the snow is lighter and more easily plowed than eastern snow of equal depth. A six-inch powder event in Santa Fe is equivalent to maybe two inches of wet snow in the northeast — easier for plows, easier for drivers, less likely to close schools. What does close schools here is the subsequent melt/freeze: daytime sun melts cleared pavement, overnight cold refreezes it to black ice, and the morning drive is dangerous even though no new snow has fallen.
Nearby mountain districts see dramatically more snow than Santa Fe proper. Teachers who commute from the foothills or mountain towns may face impassable roads even when Santa Fe's roads are clear. That cross-district staffing problem sometimes drives closures that surprise parents in the city itself.
Santa Fe averages 28 inches of snow per year but benefits from frequent Chinook wind events that can melt several inches in hours. Schools typically close 3–5 times per winter, primarily for storms that exceed plow capacity or generate ice conditions.
SnowSense™ models mountain-west melt/freeze dynamics explicitly — conditions that eastern snow-day models miss. Live probability for Santa Fe refreshes every 30 minutes.
New Mexico · 304 words of Santa Fe-specific context
Live forecasts within driving distance of Santa Fe