Good morning, Tampa Bay. Here’s what you need to know today.

Your Weather Planner 

We started our day with record low temperatures in parts of Tampa Bay!

Temperatures will stay in the 50s for most of the area this afternoon with a few places reaching 60 degrees.

A north wind is 10 to 20 mph but the winds will be lighter tonight.

You will need a jacket again tonight.

With clear skies and light winds, we will likely drop to freezing in the Nature Coast overnight. There could be areas of frost too.

Most of Tampa Bay will drop to the mid 30s to low 40s by Wednesday morning.

Highs: 60

Lows: 43

Rain Coverage: 0% 

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Around Tampa Bay

1. Record lows Tuesday morning for parts of the Bay area
The coldest air of the season so far comes in Monday and peaks Tuesday morning.

2. Citrus Cold Weather Shelter help dozens overnight from chilly temps
Citrus County Cold Weather Shelter opened last night and took in more than 40 people seeking shelter from freezing temperatures. 

3. Tampa natives turn lifelong friendship into $3 million affordable housing project
They celebrated a major milestone as the city officially cut the ribbon on their first multifamily development.

4. SeaPort Manatee handled a record number of cargo in 2025
A planned expansion has officials thinking even bigger for next year.

5. Veteran on a quest to honor first Black woman to work at Bay Pines VA
A book filled with articles, pictures and priceless items details the life of the first Black woman to work at Bay Pines VA.

Around the Nation

1. Senate approves bill to end government shutdown, sending it to House

2. FDA will remove warning label for hormone replacement therapy for menopause

3. Latest U.S. strikes on alleged drug boats kill 6 in eastern Pacific

4. Supreme Court rejects call to overturn its decision legalizing same-sex marriage nationwide

Quote of the Day

U.N. climate negotiations were expected to begin Monday at a meeting on the edge of the Brazilian Amazon, with leaders pushing for urgency, cooperation and acceleration after more than 30 years fighting to curb global warming by drastically reducing the carbon pollution that causes it.

André Corrêa do Lago, president of this year’s conference, known as COP30, emphasized that negotiators engage in “mutirão,” a Brazilian word derived from an Indigenous word that refers to a group uniting to work on a shared task.