Tip sheet: monitoring the West’s snowpack

What’s the current state of the snowpack? How have conditions changed over the season?

Employees of the California Department of Water Resources measure the snowpack in the Sierra Nevada on April 3, 2023. Photo: Kenneth James, California Department of Water Resources.

If you’re looking to gauge the depth and extent of the West’s snowpack, there are tons of helpful resources online that offer data, maps and graphics on both current and historical conditions.

This page offers a tip sheet to help navigate a variety of sites and briefly explains some of the technologies used to generate the data behind the visuals.

I’ve focused on websites that make it relatively easy for the general public to explore the data, especially with interactive maps, rather than pointing to more technical tools geared toward scientists and water managers. 

For a helpful overview of these sites and others, plus much more about the West’s snowpack, see “Snowpack Monitoring In The Rocky Mountain West,” a 2020 user guide from the Western Water Assessment and Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences at the University of Colorado Boulder. 

Table of contents

SNOTEL and snow surveys

The most popular source for data on the West’s snowpack is the federal Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), which provides a wealth of information from automated SNOTEL sensors and manually measured snow courses.

SNOTEL (as in SNOw TELemetry) is a network of around 900 sites that automatically measure the depth and water content of the snowpack while also providing data on temperature, precipitation and other climatic conditions. The stations use a “snow pillow” filled with liquid antifreeze to measure the weight of the snow above and calculate snow water equivalent (SWE), the key measure of the snow’s water content. 

While some stations use cellular and satellite communications, most use “meteor burst” technology to transmit their data by bouncing a radio signal off a band of ionized meteorites located 50 to 80 miles above the Earth. 

The photo below from NRCS shows what a typical SNOTEL station looks like. 

Source: NRCS.

SNOTEL remains the backbone of snowpack monitoring in the West, but it does have limitations. The sites are typically located in high-elevation clearings where snow persists, so this sample of locations doesn’t capture the full gamut of conditions across the vast landscapes where snow accumulates. The SNOTEL station only collects data for a single point, but conditions may vary dramatically just a short distance away due to trees, wind, shade and other factors. 

In addition to using SNOTEL stations, the NRCS collects data manually in snow courses. Using skis, snowmobiles or even helicopters, surveyors periodically travel to the sites and use a metal tube known as a snow sampler to collect data at a series of points along the snow course, which is typically 1,000 feet long. By pushing the aluminum tube into the snowpack until it touches the ground, surveyors can extract a snow core that is weighed to calculate the SWE (see this page from the California Department of Water Resources for lots of photos and info about how these surveys are done).

Aerial markers are also used to measure the snowpack in remote locations that are tough to access. These tall metal pipes have horizontal cross members that can be seen from an aircraft, allowing surveyors to measure the snow depth. With an estimate of the snow’s density, surveyors can calculate the SWE. In recent years, NRCS has outfitted some aerial markers with sensors, as shown in the photo below. 

Source: NRCS.

Several sites discussed below also use satellite data to monitor the snowpack, particularly images from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS). Although current satellite technology is unable to gauge SWE, the MODIS data does show whether snow is covering the ground while also providing information on melting, the size of snow grains and other variables.

See this page from NRCS for more information on snowpack monitoring. This page provides an overview of the NRCS snow surveys and its water supply forecasting.

Visualizing NRCS snowpack data

The best place to start is the National Water and Climate Center iMap, which allows you to create maps showing conditions at individual sites and basins (see this page for help on using the tool and this page for generating detailed reports).

The image below shows just one of the many views you can generate with the iMap tool. In this case, the map is displaying conditions for April 1, 2024, with the West’s many river basins shaded according to the percent of the median for 1991-2020. The circles show individual SNOTEL stations.

Source: NRCS.

In addition to visualizing SWE, the iMap tool includes a ton of other data, including snow depth/density, soil moisture/temperature, streamflows and reservoir storage.  

This page from NRCS offers some pre-defined maps and reports on the West’s snowpack.

NRCS state-level data

Another way to track the snowpack is by visualizing NRCS data for individual states. This page includes links to maps for 12 Western states and an overview of the region, as shown in the example below.

Source: NRCS.

The map of Idaho below shows that the SWE on April 1, 2024, varied widely from north to south across the state.

Source: NRCS.

On the NRCS state-level webpages, which I list below, you can view/download charts that show the coming and going of the snowpack over the season.

The chart below shows how the snowpack was stacking up in Colorado last season. The black line plots the current winter’s snowpack and the green line shows the 1991-2020 median. The dark blue and dark red lines chart the maximum and minimum readings during the 30-year period of record. 

Source: NRCS.

As a bonus, you can also plot projections for snowpack for the remainder of the season. In the April 4, 2024, chart below, the dashed lines show a variety of possible trajectories for the snowpack in the months ahead. 

Source: NRCS.

Below are links to the state-level sites. The first link is the overview page, followed by “site plots,” where you can view/download charts for individual SNOTEL stations, and then “basin plots,” where you can do the same for specific river basins.

Arizona

Arizona’s Snow Survey

NWCC Site Plots 

NWCC Basin Plots   

California

California Snow Survey 

NWCC Site Plots 

NWCC Basin Plots  

Colorado

Colorado Snow Survey 

NWCC Site Plots 

NWCC Basin Plots  

Idaho

Idaho Snow Survey

NWCC Site Plots 

NWCC Basin Plots  

Montana

Montana Snow Survey  

NWCC Site Plots 

NWCC Basin Plots  

Nevada

Nevada Snow Survey  

NWCC Site Plots 

NWCC Basin Plots  

New Mexico

New Mexico Snow Survey 

NWCC Site Plots 

NWCC Basin Plots  

Oregon

Oregon Snow Survey  

NWCC Site Plots 

NWCC Basin Plots  

Utah

Utah Snow Survey 

NWCC Site Plots 

NWCC Basin Plots  

Washington

Washington Snow Survey

NWCC Site Plots 

NWCC Basin Plots  

Wyoming

Wyoming Snow Survey

NWCC Site Plots 

NWCC Basin Plots  

California’s snowpack

California is included in the SNOTEL data discussed above, but the state also has its own monitoring system for the snowpack.

The California Cooperative Snow Surveys (CCSS) program, which was created by the state legislature in 1929, collects and analyzes data from more than 265 snow courses and 130 snow sensors located in the Sierra Nevada and Shasta-Trinity Mountains. 

The graphic below from the California Department of Water Resources is from this page. A printable version of today’s conditions is on this page

Source: California Department of Water Resources.

The agency also provides similar data through its SnowTrax page, which generates graphics like the ones below.

Source: California Department of Water Resources.

SnowTrax also offers more sophisticated data visualizations here, here and here

Another page from the California Department of Water Resources offers additional data and graphics. For example, this page charts how the current year’s snowpack compares to recent years and the best/worst seasons in recent history.

Detailed Sierra Nevada reports

If you’d like to see very detailed maps of the Sierra snowpack, check out this page from researchers at the Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research at the University of Colorado Boulder. These experimental products provide “near-real-time estimates” of SWE at a resolution of 500 meters (1,650 feet, or about 0.3 miles). They’re based on recent cloud-free satellite imagery and on-the-ground data from snow pillows and other sources.

Three views of the Sierra Nevada snowpack on March 18. Source: Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research.

National Operational Hydrologic Remote Sensing Center

It’s a mouthful, but NOAA’s National Operational Hydrologic Remote Sensing Center is an essential source for snow data. NOHRSC’s interactive map offers a variety of snow-related data, including depth, temperature, density and melting. You can also select data for any day since 2002. Below is an example of the snowfall during 72 hours in southern Colorado and northern New Mexico.

Source: NOHRSC’s National Gridded Snowfall Analysis.

Colorado SNODAS

Colorado’s snowpack supplies water to 19 other states downstream. If you’re looking for a detailed view of snow conditions in the state, check out SNODAS, which uses data from NOHRSC, satellites, planes and other sources to calculate daily SWE estimates for individual river basins. The project was funded by the Colorado Water Conservation Board and developed by the Open Water Foundation.

In the graphic below, I’ve highlighted the Animas River in southwest Colorado, which brings up a chart showing how the current year compares to past seasons and provides a snapshot of conditions in the basin.

Source: SNODAS

University of Arizona’s SWANN and SnowView

The University of Arizona’s Snow Water Artificial Neural Network Modeling System (SWANN) uses a variety of data and machine learning to generate near real-time estimates for SWE and snow cover across the entire nation. SWANN estimates are also available back to the early 1980s. The SnowView dashboard lets you explore data on the snowpack, snow cover and precipitation while also providing satellite imagery and streamflow forecasts (more on the tool in this presentation). The April 1 map below shows the SWE estimates for the Intermountain West that were generated using SWANN. 

Source: SnowView.

Community Collaborative Rain, Hail and Snow Network (CoCoRaHS)

CoCoRaHS is a citizen-science effort that describes itself as “a unique, non-profit, community-based network of volunteers of all ages and backgrounds working together to measure and map precipitation (rain, hail and snow).”

Measurements from volunteers are plotted on an interactive map that has data available back to 1998. The image below shows 24-hour snowfall around Durango and Pagosa Springs.

Source: CoCoRaHS.

As you’d expect, big cities have a lot more observations than rural areas. See this page for more about the project and how to sign up as a volunteer.

Data from CoCoRaHS is one of the inputs to this map from the National Centers for Environmental Information that tracks daily U.S. snowfall and snow depth.

Finally, several helpful websites aggregate data, maps and graphics from various sources, offering a quick overview of what’s happening with snowfall and the snowpack.

The Intermountain West Ski Dashboard, created by the Colorado Climate Center at Colorado State University, pulls together data on recent snowfall, short-term forecasts, weather hazards, snow depth, drought and more. Below is an example of a graphic showing that the vast majority of SNOTEL sites in Colorado were below the 50th percentile on January 1, 2024, with the vertical axis showing elevation and the different colors corresponding to different river basins:

Source: Intermountain West Ski Dashboard.

The Intermountain West Climate Dashboard, created by the Western Water Assessment at the University of Colorado Boulder, is another useful round-up that focuses on Colorado, Utah and Wyoming. For example, the graphics below from the dashboard show SWE and projected streamflows in the Intermountain region.

Source: Intermountain West Climate Dashboard.

Am I missing anything? Please feel free to suggest additions to this tip sheet by emailing me

The Water Desk’s mission is to increase the volume, depth and power of journalism connected to Western water issues. We’re an initiative of the Center for Environmental Journalism at the University of Colorado Boulder.

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