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Historical Records

Snow Day History in California

Will schools close in California tomorrow? Live snow day probability for 25 California cities, updated every 30 minutes.

California Winter Profile

California sits in the classic mid-latitude winter belt — enough snow to regularly close schools, not enough to build infrastructure for it. Across the 25 California cities covered by SnowSense™, average annual snowfall is 23 inches. Mammoth Lakes receive up to 240 inches in a typical winter; lower-latitude cities like Los Angeles see closer to 0.

School-closure decisions in California often hinge on precipitation type as much as accumulation. Storms that cross the region frequently transition from snow to sleet to freezing rain and back, and the difference between a four-inch snow event and a one-inch ice-glaze event is invisible until the storm arrives. Districts tend to close preemptively when ice risk is in the forecast.

Pick a city above to see live snow day probability for your specific California location. SnowSense™ refreshes every 30 minutes with live NWS forecast data, ice-risk modeling, and California-calibrated closure thresholds.

23"
Avg Snow/Year
25
Cities
0
Storms on Record

No storm events on record for California in our current dataset. Check the NOAA Storm Events Database for comprehensive historical records.

California Cities — Storm History

FAQ — California Snow Day History

What was the biggest snowstorm in California?

California has limited storm event data in our current dataset. Check the NOAA Storm Events Database for comprehensive historical records.

How many snow days does California get per year?

California averages 23 inches of snow per year, with most districts using 3–7 snow days annually. Ice events can consume multiple snow days at once.