Skip to content
State Wind Chill Hub

Wind Chill in North Dakota

North Dakota gets 48 inches of snow per year — but not every storm closes school. Live snow day probability for 4 North Dakota cities, calibrated to local closure thresholds.

North Dakota Winter Profile

North Dakota has one of the most snow-hardened school cultures in the country. Across the 4 North Dakota cities covered by SnowSense™, average annual snowfall is 48 inches, with Bismarck receiving up to 51 inches in a typical winter. Despite that volume, North Dakota districts close school less often than mid-Atlantic districts do — kids, buses, and roads here are built for winter.

What closes North Dakota 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 North Dakota districts' protocols. A foot of powder, by contrast, is usually just Tuesday.

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

48"
Avg Snow/Year
4
Cities
Common
Cold-Day Risk

Cold-Day School Closures in North Dakota

Schools in North Dakota typically close for cold alone when wind chills drop below dangerous thresholds. The exact threshold varies by district — urban districts with walking students tend to close at warmer wind chills than rural districts where all students ride buses.

-20°F
Common threshold
-30°F
Northern states

North Dakota Cities — Live Wind Chill