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Rain-snow showers and a gradual warm-up forecast for Juneau

Published 5:30 am Tuesday, January 6, 2026

Mari Kanagy/Juneau Empire
A tow plow drives along Glacier Highway on Monday, Jan. 5.

Mari Kanagy/Juneau Empire

A tow plow drives along Glacier Highway on Monday, Jan. 5.

Precipitation shifted to rain Tuesday after days of relentless snowfall last week. Rain-snow mix and slightly warmer weather are forecast for later this week.

According to the National Weather Service Juneau, between 6 and 12 inches of snow fell across different parts of town on Monday, as a winter storm warning was in effect. Juneau School District cancelled classes and the City and Borough of Juneau closed its facilities for Monday and Tuesday.

Showery, on-and-off snow is expected to return on Thursday, with temperatures rising and rain returning later in the week.

The latest storm that moved in Sunday night marked the end of a four-day dry stretch. That pause came after more than 50 inches of snow fell over five days, overwhelming roads, and sidewalks across town. Monday’s snow was lighter, both in amount and in texture, with conditions on Tuesday shifting toward rain.

Managing new precipitation on top of last week’s snow accumulations continues to be a challenge, NWS warns.

“When you start to think about the snow stacking on each other with the wet and the lighter snow, that can also be sometimes harder to manage,” said Erin Brunsen, meteorologist at the NWS.

Rain and wet snow falling on top of lighter snow can increase stress on roofs and make plowing more complicated.

Temperatures this week are expected to fluctuate. That back-and-forth pattern will continue through the week before a more noticeable warm-up arrives over the weekend.

For the CBJ, crews used the time to catch up on plowing after the historic snowfall. The big challenge, City Manager Katie Koester said last week, has been where to put the snow.

“Snow removal process takes a long time because we basically have to, either with snow blowers or loaders, load all of that snow up into dump trucks and then take it away,” Koester said.

By the weekend, temperatures are expected to trend warmer, increasing the likelihood that incoming precipitation will fall as rain rather than snow.

This story has been updated.