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“AccuWeather Forecast: Major Early-Winter Storm to Disrupt Holiday Travel Across Midwest & Northeast on December 1, 2025”

AccuWeather tracks a powerful early-winter storm poised to snarl holiday travel across the Midwest and Northeast on December 1, 2025.

Emma Caldwell profile picture

By Emma Caldwell on news

Dec. 01, 2025

As the calendar turns to December 1, 2025, AccuWeather is at the center of a busy early-winter weather pattern across the United States, with its forecasts helping travelers and commuters navigate a stormy start to the season. A sprawling winter storm system is marching from the Midwest toward the Northeast, threatening heavy snow, ice and rain that could disrupt everything from highways to hub airports over the next several days. While the storm itself was first outlined over the weekend, today’s coverage from regional outlets is leaning heavily on AccuWeather guidance to explain what’s coming and where the worst impacts are likely to hit.

In the Midwest, local reports in cities such as Chicago are warning drivers to brace for an especially slick evening commute, with more snow expected on top of what fell over the weekend. Forecast discussions reference AccuWeather projections for additional light to moderate accumulations and reduced visibility, coming as O’Hare and Midway airports work to recover from an earlier round of weather-related cancellations and delays. For residents, that means planning extra travel time and being ready for rapidly changing conditions through tonight.

Farther east, communities in Ohio and Pennsylvania are preparing for the same storm complex as it pivots toward the interior Northeast. In Columbus, a winter weather advisory in effect overnight calls for several inches of snow, a forecast closely aligned with AccuWeather’s analysis of a cold dome of air entrenched over the region as moisture surges in from the southwest. The combination sets the stage for heavy, wet snow capable of coating roads before a gradual transition to mixed precipitation.

The ripple effects are already being felt along major travel corridors. National travel industry coverage highlights AccuWeather’s warnings about a corridor of disruptive winter weather stretching from Kansas and Nebraska through Ohio and into New England, creating the potential for days of rolling flight delays and difficult driving conditions. With December holiday travel beginning to ramp up, those forecasts are serving as a key planning tool for airlines, highway agencies and everyday travelers trying to decide whether to leave early, rebook or stay put.

In the Mid-Atlantic, Philadelphia is watching the same system with a bit less anxiety. Local meteorologists, citing AccuWeather senior forecasters, expect only modest snow north and west of the city before a quick changeover to rain, underscoring how small shifts in track and temperature can dramatically alter outcomes over short distances. For readers across the U.S., today’s evolving forecast picture is a reminder of why hyperlocal, hour‑by‑hour guidance from services like AccuWeather matters when winter storms arrive right as the holiday season kicks into gear.