2025 Gulf Coast blizzard
Composite of snowfall reports and satellite view of the Gulf Coast after the blizzard on January 22 | |
| Meteorological history | |
|---|---|
| Formed | January 20, 2025 |
| Exited land | January 22, 2025 |
| Dissipated | January 27, 2025 |
| Category 1 "Notable" blizzard | |
| Regional snowfall index: 2.93 (NOAA) | |
| Lowest pressure | 939 mbar (hPa); 27.73 inHg (see Storm Éowyn) |
| Maximum snowfall or ice accretion | Snowfall – 13.4 in (34 cm) near Grand Coteau, Louisiana Ice – 0.25 in (6.4 mm) in Hebbronville, Texas |
| Overall effects | |
| Fatalities | 13 |
| Damage | $200 million (2025 USD) |
| Areas affected | U.S. Gulf Coast, Southeast |
| Power outages | >77,000 |
Part of the 2024–25 North American winter | |
The 2025 Gulf Coast blizzard, also unofficially referred to as Winter Storm Enzo by The Weather Channel and media outlets, was a rare and unusually strong winter storm and blizzard impacting much of the Gulf Coast of the United States between January 20 and January 22, 2025. It brought snowfall to regions of the Gulf Coast that rarely receive wintry precipitation. This was the first recorded blizzard on the Gulf Coast and the most significant winter storm in the region since 1895. The storm originated from an area of low pressure that developed in the western Gulf of Mexico along an Arctic cold front on January 20. It moved eastward and dropped large amounts of winter precipitation along the coastlines before it moved offshore on January 22. The storm later evolved into Storm Éowyn in the northeastern Atlantic.
Due to the threat of heavy snowfall in cities such as New Orleans, Houston, and Pensacola, states of emergency were declared in almost every state along the Gulf Coast. During the height of the storm on January 21, a blizzard warning was issued for parts of Southwestern Louisiana into Southeastern Texas, way farther south than any such warning had previously been issued. Thousands of scheduled airline flights were postponed or cancelled across the Gulf Coast due to the storm. Snow accumulations ranged from 6–12 inches (15–30 cm) across most of the Gulf Coast region to the north and west of the Florida Peninsula. The states of Louisiana and Florida recorded their largest single-day snowfall accumulations, breaking records that had stood for almost a century. At least 77,000 people lost power due to the storm, with most of the outages being reported in Louisiana and Florida. At least 13 people died as a result of the storm, and financial losses were estimated to be at least US$200 million.