See the latest forecast for the rest of the week here.
More than 47,000 customers were without power Monday morning after severe thunderstorms drenched much of North Texas overnight.
Power outages peaked overnight around 90,000, according to Oncor’s outage map. Of the more than 45,000 reported Monday, most were concentrated in D-FW, with Dallas County reporting more than 12,000 outages and Tarrant County seeing more than 8,600.
The swift-moving storms, which brought strong wind gusts and an average of 1 to 3 inches of rain, put several counties in North and Central Texas under severe thunderstorm warnings and watches and spurred threats of flash flooding that lingered into the early morning hours.
The highest wind gust, 76 mph, was recorded in southeastern Grayson County, but DFW International Airport was close behind at 68 mph. Most of North Texas had their wind speeds top out in the upper 40s to 50s, according to a roundup of highest wind reports by the National Weather Service’s Fort Worth office.
The overnight system appears to have dropped more water as it moved east, according to weather service data, but the pattern wasn’t uniform. Much of Dallas County saw over 2 inches of rain, but DFW Airport only reported 0.86 inches. Lancaster saw over 3 inches.
A preliminary damage report for Fannin County mostly discussed large tree branches down and minor structural damage to homes and businesses.
Forecasts had previously warned of damaging winds exceeding 80 mph, golf ball-sized hail, localized flooding and even a few spin-up tornadoes.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott activated several state emergency response resources ahead of the storms, including rescue squads for stranded drivers, saw crews to clear roads and agents designated to address agricultural and livestock recovery.
There are chances for additional storms through the work week and into the weekend — including the potential for another round of severe conditions on Wednesday and Thursday.
Additional scattered storms are expected tonight into Tuesday morning. The severe weather threat is low, but isolated large hail and gusty winds are possible. Localized flooding is also a concern for areas that received heavy rainfall last night. #dfwwx #ctxwx pic.twitter.com/aGnAfXqKPl
— NWS Fort Worth (@NWSFortWorth) June 9, 2025
Scattered storms are expected Monday night into Tuesday morning, and the weather service said isolated large hail and gusty winds are possible.
Localized flooding is also a concern in areas that have already received heavy rainfall.
Afternoon temperatures will also be cooler, peaking in the 80s each day of the week.
The latest Dallas forecast from KXAS-TV (NBC5):
TUESDAY: Partly cloudy and warm with a 50% chance of showers and thunderstorms. Low: 69. High: 84. Wind: E 5-10 mph.
WEDNESDAY: Partly to mostly cloudy with a 30% chance of showers and storms. Low: 71. High: 85. Wind: SE 10-15 mph.
THURSDAY: Partly to mostly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Low: 73. High: 86.
FRIDAY: Partly cloudy and warm with a chance of showers and storms. Low: 75. High: 91.