Largest October Snowfalls

snow scene
An evening street scene in St. Paul, following an unusual October heavy snowfall on on October 20, 2020.
Courtesy of Minnesota State Climatology Office

Minnesotans are used to seeing snow in October, but heavy accumulating snow is harder to come by because deeply cold air usually has not settled into the region yet, and because warm ground conditions left over from summer often melt snow as or just after it falls.

That said, Minnesota has seen its share of October heavy snow storms. These somewhat rare events inspire speculation about the coming winter and stay lodged in our memories for years. The Halloween Blizzard of 1991 remains a storytelling fixture for those who experienced it. Perhaps the early-season snowstorm of October 20, 2020 will become one too.

Yet Minnesota's heaviest October snow was not from the infamous Halloween storm--mostly because the heaviest snow from that massive event occurred on November 1st in most places. In fact, as October snowfalls go, the Halloween storm ranks near the bottom of the top, as does the October 20, 2020 storm.

Minnesota's largest verified daily snowfall total during October was 16.0 inches in Baudette on October 18, 1916. Other northwestern and northern Minnesota observers recorded 6 inches or more that day.

Other very heavy daily snow totals during October have included 15 inches at Sandy Lake Dam on October 25, 1942; 8-12 inches from Wadena, to Lake Itasca, to Leech Lake, and back to the Sandy Lake Dam on October 30, 1951; and 6-12 inches across the eastern third of Minnesota on October 31 of 1991.

Duluth's largest daily October snowfall is 10.6 inches on October 27, 2017, when much of northeastern Minnesota received 6-11 inches.  In 2019, heavy snows worked into far western Minnesota on October 12th, with 4-8 inches falling in far western Minnesota near Fergus Falls and Detroit Lakes, as a ferocious blizzard pounded areas in North Dakota just 50-100 miles to the west with over two feet of snow. The October 20, 2020 snowstorm produced a swath of 6-9 inches across a large part of southern and central Minnesota.

Although October (and other early-season) snowstorms get our attention, they appear to have no bearing on the remainder of winter. Snows in October do not necessarily mean we are in for excessive cold and/or snow.

Below are the three largest daily October snowfall totals for Duluth, International Falls, Rochester, St. Cloud, and the Twin Cities.

Duluth: Largest Daily Snowfall Totals, October
RankDateAmount (inches)
1October 27, 201710.6
2October 23, 193310.0
3October 15, 19667.9

 

Int. Falls: Largest Daily Snowfall Totals, October
RankDateAmount (inches)
1October 18, 19176.0
2October 27, 19884.8
3October 01, 19814.5

 

Rochester: Largest Daily Snowfall Totals, October
RankDateAmount (inches)
1October 22, 19795.0
2October 23, 20094.2
3October 30, 19304.0

 

St. Cloud: Largest Daily Snowfall Totals, October
RankDateAmount (inches)
1October 20, 20207.0
2October 20, 19365.8
3October 23, 19954.9

 

Twin Cities: Largest Daily Snowfall Totals, October
RankDateAmount (inches)
1October 31, 19918.2
2October 20, 20207.9
3October 29, 19055.5

Modified October 21, 2020.

 

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