PITTSBURGH, PA — Tornadoes aren’t necessary for spring storms to be destructive. Pittsburgh found that out last year when a line of storms moved through the area in April, killing two people, knocking out power to nearly 400,000 homes and causing widespread destruction that took weeks to clean up.
Prepare for the possibility of similar dangerous weather in the next few months.
In a severe weather outlook released on Wednesday, State College-based AccuWeather predicted said the Ohio, mid-Mississippi and Tennessee could face multiple storm threats in March and April. While there is expected to be less tornado activity this year than in 2025, AccuWeather is forecasting storms with more frequent and heavier downpours,flooding and damaging straight-line wind events.
“Do not let your guard down this severe weather season,” AccuWeather meteorolgist Alex Duffus said in a release.
“Flash floods and damaging wind gusts can be just as destructive as tornadoes and often impact a much larger area. Tornado reports may trend lower than last year, but it only takes one storm striking a densely populated or vulnerable community to make this a devastating season.”
AccuWeather predicts 1,050 to 1,250 tornadoes across the U.S. compared to 1,544 preliminary tornado reports last year, a roughly 20 to 30 percent decrease from 2025