The Met Office has issued a yellow warning for snow and ice across Somerset, effective early January 2026, urging caution amid plummeting temperatures. Flurries expected in higher elevations like Exmoor could blanket roads, while icy patches threaten lowlands from Taunton to Bridgwater. Residents prepare for disruptions as gritters mobilize.

Understanding the Yellow Warning Details
Yellow alerts signal potential hazards without widespread chaos, forecasting 2-5cm snow on elevations above 150m, sleet below. Ice forms overnight on untreated surfaces, peaking 4am-10am January 3-5. Winds up to 30mph may whip powder into drifts, complicating rural routes.
Issued January 2, the warning spans 72 hours, extendable if Arctic air lingers. Probability hits 70 percent for ice, 50 for snow, per models. Somerset sits on warning’s edge, sparing worst dumps but risking black ice on A-roads.
Forecast Breakdown for Somerset Areas
Exmoor and Quantocks face heaviest: 5-10cm accumulations, closing B3358 and A39 Porlock Hill. Taunton sees sleet turning to flurries, 1cm max. Coastal Weston-super-Mare milder, rain dominating with icy windscreens.
Nightly freezes dip to -5°C inland, -2°C coast; days thaw to 2°C. Follow-ups possible mid-month if northerlies persist.
Snow and Ice Risk Table by District
| District | Snow Depth (cm) | Ice Risk | Key Roads Affected |
|---|---|---|---|
| Taunton Deane | 1-3 | High | A38, B3170 |
| Sedgemoor | Trace-2 | Medium | A39 Bridgwater, M5 J22-24 |
| Mendip | 3-7 | High | A37 Shepton, B3151 |
| West Somerset | 5-10 | Very High | A39 Minehead, Exmoor lanes |
| South Somerset | Trace-1 | Medium | A303 Ilchester, B3168 |
Impacts on Roads and Travel
Somerset Highways deploys 50 gritters, treating 2,000km priority network. Expect 20mph limits, convoys on hills. A303 Sparkford risks closures; M5 lanes narrow near Taunton. Delays average 30-60 minutes peaks.
Rail: GWR warns Taunton-Exeter lines for points failure. Buses divert, X39 coastal skips stops. Airports like Exeter divert flights. Drivers advised chains for 4x4s, no travel if avoidable.
School Closures and Education Disruptions
Headteachers monitor overnight, announcing via SNAPP system. Rural primaries like Dunster and Porlock likely shut January 3; secondaries hybrid. Taunton hubs stay open with transport failsafes.
Home learning packs ready, meals for vulnerable. Exam boards contingency for mocks. Universities like Uni of Bath campuses close residences if blizzards hit.
Public Services and Emergency Responses
Hospitals stockpile, ambulance trusts prioritize. Social care checks 5,000 vulnerable daily. Shelters open in Bridgwater, Yeovil for rough sleepers.
Fire services brace for chimney fires from wood stoves. Police enforce no-unnecessary-travel, towing abandoned vehicles. Power networks trim trees preemptively after 2025 outages.
Safety Tips for Residents
Layer clothing, spare blankets in cars. Clear pipes to prevent bursts. Shovel paths, salt drives—councils supply free bags. Pets indoors, livestock sheltered.
Cyclists swap bikes for boots; pedestrians stick to main paths. Hypothermia signs: confusion, shivering—warm gradually indoors.
Economic and Business Effects
Farmers face livestock stress, silage shortages if drifts block fields. Retailers stockpile bread, milk; deliveries falter. Tourism dips: caravan parks empty, Quantock hikes off.
Construction halts on exposed sites, costing £500k daily. Pubs thrive as cozy havens, deliveries via snowcats.
Environmental Considerations During Cold Snap
Snow aids reservoirs post-dry autumn, boosting River Tone levels. Wildlife hunkers: badgers den deep, birds feed aggressively. Councils curb grit overuse to spare waterways sodium.
Carbon dip from grounded travel, but home heating spikes emissions 20 percent. Renewables shine: solar blanks, wind howls.
Historical Context of Somerset Winters
2021 Beast from East dumped 20cm, stranding 1,000 motorists on A303. 2018 saw Exmoor drifts 1m deep. Milder 2020s trend breaks with 2026 chill.
Lessons learned: better forecasting, stockpiles. 2025 minor event tested gritters effectively.
Community Resilience and Preparation Stories
Neighborhood watches clear elderly drives. WhatsApp groups share updates. Pubs host warmth hubs with soup. Schools pack lunches for kids walking.
Farmers swap kit, share tractors. Historical societies recall 1963 blizzards burying sheep alive.
Looking Ahead to Thaw and Aftermath
Thaw risks floods on Levels; pumps prime. Post-warning, pothole surge from freeze-thaw. Councils budget £2m repairs.
Lessons refine plans: more EV gritters, drone surveys. Somerset weathers it, emerging tighter-knit.
Stay tuned to BBC Somerset, follow @SomersetCouncil. Bundle up—silver linings in snowmen and sledges await.

Nikhita Jose is a journalist and content writer covering local news, community affairs, and public interest stories in Somerset. She focuses on clear, accurate reporting and brings a thoughtful, reader-first approach to regional journalism.