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Historical Records

Snow Day History in New York

New York gets 63 inches of snow per year — but not every storm closes school. Live snow day probability for 19 New York cities, calibrated to local closure thresholds.

New York Winter Profile

New York has one of the most snow-hardened school cultures in the country. Across the 19 New York cities covered by SnowSense™, average annual snowfall is 63 inches, with Syracuse receiving up to 124 inches in a typical winter. Despite that volume, New York districts close school less often than mid-Atlantic districts do — kids, buses, and roads here are built for winter.

What closes New York schools isn't snow accumulation — it's wind chill, ice, or infrastructure failure. Sustained wind chills below −30°F trigger safety-driven cold-day cancellations under most New York districts' protocols. A foot of powder, by contrast, is usually just Tuesday.

The city links above show live snow day probability for every covered New York city. SnowSense™ weighs wind-chill risk separately from accumulation for New York, so a frigid-but-clear day can still register a probability spike when accumulation-only models would show zero.

63"
Avg Snow/Year
19
Cities
0
Storms on Record

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

New York Cities — Storm History

FAQ — New York Snow Day History

What was the biggest snowstorm in New York?

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

How many snow days does New York get per year?

Despite averaging 63 inches of snow per year, New York districts typically use only 3–5 snow days annually. The state's winter infrastructure handles routine snow efficiently.