Chicago is going to see two rounds of severe weather as temperatures increase, with the first wave coming Wednesday afternoon and into the night, according to the National Weather Service.
The entire Chicago metro area was under severe thunderstorm warnings Wednesday, with the first ones hitting the Western suburbs around 3 p.m. With it will come up to an inch of rain in some areas as well as 60 to 75 mph wind gusts, the weather service said.
While a tornado threat couldn’t be ruled out closer to Chicago Wednesday — a warning was issued for Joliet, Cresthill and Shorewood around 3:20 p.m. — he said the damaging winds were a much more likely threat, bringing “considerable damage” to “trees, mobile homes, roofs and outbuildings.”
The storms were also moving at 45mph, according to the weather service, meaning they have less of a chance to dump large amounts of rain, Birk said.
“This line is moving pretty quick,” said NWS meteorologist Kevin Birk. “So the main story is damaging wind gusts.”
ComEd is already preparing for the damage the storm could cause, and subsequent outages.
“We’ve been closely monitoring these weather conditions and are fully prepared to respond quickly and restore service for customers who may be impacted,” said David Perez, executive vice president and COO of ComEd, said in a statement. “Our crews will work safely around the clock to ensure any outage our customers experience is brief.”
Severe Thunderstorm Warning continues for Chicago IL, Naperville IL and Waukegan IL until 4:30 PM CDT. This storm will contain wind gusts to 70 MPH! pic.twitter.com/hCj8W9WcwA
— NWS Chicago (@NWSChicago) June 10, 2026
On Thursday, the area is slated to see another round of storms coming in later in the afternoon into the evening, with the potential to be even stronger. Birk said the rising temperatures — with highs Wednesday reaching up to 89 degrees and staying in the high 80s until Friday — were strengthening the storms.
His rule of thumb for staying safe amid the storms: “If you hear thunder, go indoors or take shelter.”“[Thursday’s storm] will have the potential for strong wind gusts and tornado threats,” Birk said. “The storms feed off the warm and humid air mass.”
Here are our latest thoughts with the threat for multiple waves of severe storms in our area over the next 48 hours. The main threat today will be damaging winds, while all hazards including tornadoes are a threat tomorrow. #ILwx #INwx pic.twitter.com/PkuZqa3XHQ
— NWS Chicago (@NWSChicago) June 10, 2026