No upcoming precipitation for the next hour.
Last update: 22:00, 9 Jul 2026
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Washington, Georgia experiences Piedmont convection and tropical remnants. The Washington rain radar delivers real-time precipitation data from KFFC (Atlanta/Peachtree City), updated every 4–6 minutes at up to 250-meter resolution — showing exactly when and where rain will arrive, not just whether it might.
Storms in this part of Georgia typically approach from southwest. RainViewer's hyperlocal radar includes direction arrows and a 2-hour nowcast, so residents and visitors in Washington can make informed decisions about travel, outdoor plans, and weather preparation with real advance notice.
Washington's highest weather risk aligns with June–September (convective) and March–May (frontal+tornado). Piedmont convection and tropical remnants drives the primary precipitation events across this region.
Seasonal transitions bring variable conditions. A live radar is more reliable than a forecast during these windows when storm behavior is least predictable.
Precipitation probability drops in Washington during October–November. Outdoor activities proceed with lower weather uncertainty during this period.
A radar check before leaving gives Washington drivers 20+ minutes to adjust departure timing, choose alternate routes, or wait out a fast-moving cell. Real-time radar is more actionable than a forecast probability for daily commute decisions.
Construction crews, outdoor event staff, and recreation managers in Washington use the live radar to get 20–30 minutes of advance notice before rain arrives from southwest. That window is enough to shelter equipment, complete outdoor tasks, or alert attendees.
RainViewer aggregates radar data for the United States from the NEXRAD network operated by NOAA's National Weather Service — 160 WSR-88D stations covering the contiguous US, Alaska, Hawaii, and US territories. Data updates every 4–6 minutes as each station completes its scan cycle. RainViewer processes and displays NEXRAD data at up to 250-meter resolution, preserving the raw scan data rather than smoothing it into regional averages. For Washington, Georgia, the primary NEXRAD source is KFFC (Atlanta/Peachtree City), providing hyperlocal radar coverage across the area.
Washington can experience localized flooding during intense rain, particularly in low-lying areas near drainage channels and road underpasses. Piedmont convection and tropical remnants means runoff can accumulate quickly in parts of Georgia. A live radar gives advance warning to avoid flood-prone areas.
Washington's primary rain season runs through June–September (convective) and March–May (frontal+tornado), driven by Piedmont convection and tropical remnants. The driest period is typically October–November, when outdoor activities carry less weather risk.
Yes — RainViewer shows live NEXRAD data for Washington at up to 250-meter resolution, updated every 4–6 minutes from KFFC (Atlanta/Peachtree City). The map shows current precipitation, storm direction, and a 2-hour nowcast.
RainViewer Essential sends a rain alert 10–15 minutes before precipitation reaches your saved location in Washington, Georgia. Set an alert for your specific address — not just a general area warning.
Rain in Washington can arrive from southwest faster than a forecast update.
Forecasts cover Georgia broadly. RainViewer shows the exact cell position over Washington, updated every 4–6 minutes.
Your weather app shows rain likely near Washington. RainViewer shows the cell position and arrival time.
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