Saturday, February 21, 2026

Remembering New York's "Snowmageddon" During the Winter of 2011

 

Between Dec. 26, 2010 and Feb. 2, 2011, a mere 39 days, New York received an incredible 57.6" inches of snow - more than double the amount of a typical winter's snowfall.  Although the bulk came from two blizzards, 20" on Dec. 26-27, 2010, and 19" on Jan. 26-27, 2011, an additional 17" fell in the four weeks between those storms. 

In Just 39 Days …

 

Snowfall

Dec 26-27, 2010

20.0"

Jan 7 2011

1.7"

Jan 11-12, 2011

9.1"

Jan 18 2011

1.0"

Jan 21 2011

4.2"

Jan 25 2011

1.0"

Jan 26-27 2011

19.0"

Feb 1-2 2011

1.6"

TOTAL

57.6"

 

What's more, in the 12 months between February 2010 (when 36.9" fell, making it the snowiest month on record) and January 2011, a total of 93 inches of snow fell.  However, in the following two winters just 20 inches fell (until the snowstorm of Feb. 8-9, 2013 dumped 11.4").

Despite the huge amount of snow that fell in this 5-week period, the winter of 2010-11 didn't become the snowiest on record.  With a snowfall total of 61.9" (just 5.8" fell in February and March), it ended up as New York's third snowiest winter, ranking behind 1995-96 (75.6") and 1947-48 (63.2"). 

GreenwichVillage_Snow_2010

 

In addition to winter 2011's Snowmageddon, here is a list of other major snowy periods, dating back to the winter of 1960.  Half of them occurred since 2005. 

Snowmageddons Since 1960



 


 

# of

 

Winter

Dates

Days

Snowfall

2011 -

Dec 26 - Jan 27

39

57.6"

1996 -

Dec 19 - Feb 17

61

57.0"

1961 -

Dec 11 - Feb 4

56

53.8"

2014 -

Jan 21 - Feb 18

29

42.1"

1967 -

Feb 6 - March 22

45

41.0"

1978 -

Jan 13 - Feb 14

33

40.2"

2015 -

Jan 24 - March 5

41

39.4"

2010 -

Feb 10 -26

17

35.9"

2005 -

Jan 22 - March 1

39

32.7"

1994 -

Feb 8 - March 3

24

29.8"

Analysis of NOAA's Local Climatological Data

 

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