Met Office Yorkshire snow weather warning upgraded to amber

-Credit: (Image: Getty)
-Credit: (Image: Getty)


Heavy snowfall in Yorkshire has sparked an amber snow warning for parts of the county.

The Met Office has issued the warning from 7am this morning (Saturday) until midday. The amber alert, upped from the yellow alert issued earlier in the week, could bring widespread disruption before forecasters say it will melt away quickly.

The amber warning encompasses large swathes of North Yorkshire, as the rest of North Yorkshire, as well as South and West Yorkshire, remain in the yellow warning zone. The yellow snow and rain weather warning is in force from now until 10am on Sunday morning.

READ MORE: M1 crash live updates as Huddersfield traffic held after collision

READ MORE: Homeowners have just hours left to check their lofts as snow looms

According to weather experts, the Vale of York is due to be the worst-hit region in Yorkshire this weekend with more than 10cm in some areas.

The Met Office says: "Heavy snow will spread northeastwards on Saturday morning giving significant accumulations, especially on hills. Temporary accumulations of 5-10 cm are possible in the Vale of York, with 10-20 cm on ground typically above 200m, and potentially as much as 20-30 cm on hills above 400m.

"Snow will eventually change to rain in all areas by Saturday afternoon, but may be preceded by a short spell of freezing rain in places adding to the ice risk. Strengthening winds will lead to drifting of lying snow, with difficult travelling conditions likely on higher level routes, and the risk of interruptions to power supplies.

"A fairly rapid thaw of lying snow is then likely later on Saturday and overnight as milder air moves in."

What to expect

  • Travel delays on roads are likely, stranding some vehicles and passengers

  • Power cuts are likely and other services, such as mobile phone coverage, may be affected

  • There is a good chance that some rural communities could become cut off

  • Some delays and cancellations to rail travel are likely