December 29, 2025
Back to all stories

Snow, high winds snarl Twin Cities roads; 5–7" metro totals confirmed

A winter storm dropped roughly 5–7 inches across the Twin Cities metro — Burnsville 7", Maple Grove 6.2", MSP Airport 5.8" and Chanhassen 5.6" — while high winds produced white‑out conditions and slippery roads that snarled travel. I‑35 was closed between Albert Lea and Ames, Iowa, and no‑travel advisories were in effect across southern Minnesota; blizzard warnings covered much of western and southern Minnesota, with heavier totals reported in western Wisconsin (Haugen 9", Eau Claire 8.5") and final totals from blizzard‑warning zones still pending.

Weather Transit & Infrastructure Public Safety

📌 Key Facts

  • Sunday’s storm left most of the Twin Cities metro with 5–7 inches of snow; site readings included Burnsville 7 in, Maple Grove 6.2 in, MSP Airport 5.8 in and Chanhassen 5.6 in.
  • Western Wisconsin reported higher totals — Haugen 9 in and Eau Claire 8.5 in — indicating the storm intensified eastward.
  • As of early Monday, Interstate 35 was closed between Albert Lea, Minnesota and Ames, Iowa; no‑travel advisories were in effect across southern Minnesota during the event.
  • Blizzard warnings covered much of western and southern Minnesota during the storm; final totals from those blizzard‑warning zones remain pending.
  • Local reporting (FOX 9 Minneapolis–St. Paul) compiled and confirmed the metro totals and regional impacts in its 'Minnesota snow totals' update published early Monday.

📊 Relevant Data

In a 2023 snow emergency in Minneapolis, 4,615 vehicles were towed, generating nearly $1 million in fines and fees, with the majority extracted from low-income neighborhoods.

When snow falls, money flows ... from those who can afford it the least — MinnPost

In 2023, Minnesota recorded 11,832 traffic crashes on snowy or icy roads, resulting in 28 fatalities and 2,230 injury crashes.

Minnesota Motor Vehicle Crash Facts 2023 — Minnesota Department of Public Safety

Minnesota has warmed by 3.0°F between 1895 and 2020, with winter warming 2–3 times faster than summer, and the winter of 2023–24 was the warmest on record.

Climate trends — Minnesota Department of Natural Resources

📰 Source Timeline (2)

Follow how coverage of this story developed over time

December 29, 2025
12:58 PM
Minnesota snow totals: How much snow did the winter storm drop?
FOX 9 Minneapolis-St. Paul
New information:
  • Confirms metro snow totals from Sunday’s storm largely in the 5–7 inch range, with specific site readings: Burnsville 7", Maple Grove 6.2", MSP Airport 5.8", Chanhassen 5.6".
  • Reports comparative totals in western Wisconsin, including Haugen at 9" and Eau Claire at 8.5", showing the storm’s eastward intensity.
  • Notes that as of early Monday, I‑35 remains closed between Albert Lea and Ames, Iowa, and that no-travel advisories were in effect across southern Minnesota during the event.
  • Adds early context that blizzard warnings covered much of western and southern Minnesota, with final totals from those blizzard‑warning zones still pending.