Metro Atlanta residents are bundling up as an unseasonable Arctic cold front sweeps through the region, bringing the area’s first widespread freeze of the season.

The National Weather Service has issued a Freeze Warning for much of north and central Georgia, including the Atlanta metro area, effective from 7 p.m. Monday through 10 a.m. Tuesday.

Atlanta Braces for Arctic Blast

Early Tuesday morning, temperatures are forecast to plummet into the upper 20s across the city, with some suburbs potentially dipping as low as 26-28 degrees.

This could tie or approach record lows for November 11, marking Atlanta’s coldest morning since February.

Daytime highs on Monday struggled to reach the mid-40s — a sharp drop from Sunday’s near-70-degree warmth — before rebounding slightly to around 49 degrees on Tuesday.

The cold snap is part of a larger wintry blast affecting the eastern U.S., with the Southeast experiencing some of the most anomalous chill relative to normal early-November temperatures.

Will It Snow in Atlanta on Tuesday?

While metro Atlanta is unlikely to see significant accumulation, stray flurries were reported in northern suburbs Monday afternoon, and higher elevations in north Georgia are under a Winter Weather Advisory until 7 a.m. Tuesday, with light snow possible in the mountains.

Impacts and Precautions
Frost and freeze conditions could kill sensitive plants, damage crops, and harm unprotected outdoor plumbing. 25 Officials urge residents to:

  • Bring potted plants indoors or cover them.
  • Wrap or drip outdoor pipes to prevent bursting.
  • Provide shelter for pets and check on elderly neighbors.
  • Prepare vehicles with blankets, ice scrapers, and emergency kits.

Roads may become slick overnight, especially on bridges and overpasses, as temperatures fall below freezing.

Warming Centers Activated
In response, the City of Atlanta has opened warming centers starting at 8 p.m. Monday at Central Park Recreation Center (400 Merritts Ave. NE) and Old Adamsville Recreation Center (3404 Delmar Ln. NW), with transportation from the Gateway Center.

DeKalb County centers, including locations in Decatur and Chamblee, will also be open through Tuesday morning.

The chill won’t last long — highs are expected to climb back into the 60s by midweek and near 70 by the weekend.
Stay tuned to local forecasts and sign up for CodeRED alerts for updates.

For the latest weather alerts, visit weather.gov or download a local news app. Stay warm, Atlanta!