Snow Day Probability
☀️ Chance of school cancellation tomorrow
Data provided by Open-Meteo
The St. Petersburg area school districts in Florida together serve thousands of students across many public, charter, and private campuses. The St. Petersburg area averages approximately 0 inches of snowfall per year, with the heaviest snowfall typically occurring between January and February.
School districts in St. Petersburg generally post closure decisions to district websites and notify parents through automated alerts and local broadcasters, typically before sunrise on storm days, after coordinating with bus contractors and transportation supervisors. Two-hour delays and remote-learning days are sometimes used in St. Petersburg as alternatives to a full closure when conditions are borderline.
St. Petersburg's geography plays a meaningful role in its winter weather: a humid subtropical to tropical climate where school closures are driven by hurricanes far more often than snow. These factors directly influence how often St. Petersburg schools end up closed during a given winter. Geographically, St. Petersburg sits near 27.77°N, 82.64°W, which shapes how regional storm systems and Arctic air masses interact with the area.
Notable historic snow events in or near St. Petersburg include the rare 1989 snow event that briefly dusted the northern panhandle, which produced widespread closures across the region. Historically, schools in the St. Petersburg area close an average of approximately 1 days per winter season due to snow, ice, or extreme cold. Use our Snow Day Calculator above to check tomorrow's real-time school closure probability for St. Petersburg based on live weather forecast data from Open-Meteo.
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Our calculator pulls live weather forecast data for St. Petersburg from the Open-Meteo API and analyzes snowfall accumulation, temperature, wind chill, and 24-hour precipitation totals to generate a school closure probability percentage.
Check between 9 PM and midnight the evening before a potential storm. Weather models are most reliable within a 12–18 hour forecast window, giving you the most accurate prediction for the following morning.
Yes. Public schools close more readily than private schools, which close more readily than colleges and universities. Select your school type for the most accurate St. Petersburg prediction.