ST. LOUIS | Extreme Heat Warning remains the active weather headline for St. Louis City and St. Louis County, according to official National Weather Service alert data reviewed by CGN News. This article is a public-safety planning brief, not a substitute for live emergency instructions, and readers should keep checking official alerts because advisories and warnings can change quickly.
What is active now
The active alert is Extreme Heat Warning for St. Louis City and St. Louis County. CGN News is publishing this update because the official alert data includes one or more CGN coverage areas and because heat, flooding or storm-related hazards can affect travel, work, schools, events and vulnerable households even when conditions vary block by block.
NWS metadata lists this alert as Severe. That metadata helps readers understand how the alert is categorized, but immediate decisions should be based on the current official warning, advisory, statement or cancellation for the county where the reader is located.
The alert is effective 28 June 2026 at 2:27 PM EDT and listed to expire or end 3 July 2026 at 1:00 AM EDT. Expiration times can change if the Weather Service extends, replaces or cancels the product.
Current official alerts
Extreme Heat Warning: NWS lists the affected area as Clinton; Washington; Randolph; Madison; St. Clair; Monroe; Warren; St. Charles; Franklin; St. Louis; St. Louis City; Jefferson; Ste. Genevieve. Current listed expiration or ending time: 3 July 2026 at 1:00 AM EDT.
Coverage area
This CGN alert covers St. Louis City and St. Louis County. Nearby counties and communities may have different alert levels, different timing or no active alert at all. Readers should check the latest county-specific NWS information before travel, outdoor work, medical appointments, sports, public events, childcare decisions or overnight planning.
Safety guidance
Limit strenuous outdoor activity, drink water, check on older adults and people without reliable cooling, and never leave children or pets in vehicles. Outdoor workers should use shade, rest breaks and hydration plans.
Heat alerts are especially important for older adults, people without reliable air conditioning, outdoor workers, people taking heat-sensitive medications, children, unhoused residents, athletes and people with chronic medical conditions. The safest plan is to reduce exposure before symptoms begin, not after heat illness has already started.
For households, the practical steps are straightforward: check indoor cooling, charge phones, keep water available, identify a cooler place to go if the home becomes unsafe, and make contact with neighbors or relatives who may not receive digital alerts. For employers, coaches and event organizers, the planning question is whether outdoor activity can be moved earlier, shortened, shaded, cooled or postponed.
Official instruction
Drink plenty of fluids, stay in an air-conditioned room, stay out of the sun, and check up on relatives and neighbors. Young children and pets should never be left unattended in vehicles under any circumstances. Take extra precautions if you work or spend time outside. When possible reschedule strenuous activities to early morning or evening. Know the signs and symptoms of heat exhaustion and heat stroke. Wear lightweight and loose fitting clothing when possible. To reduce risk during outdoor work, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration recommends scheduling frequent rest breaks in shaded or air conditioned environments. Anyone overcome by heat should be moved to a cool and…
What remains unclear
A weather alert confirms that official criteria or expected conditions support the product, but it does not mean every neighborhood will experience the same impact at the same time. Local drainage, tree cover, building cooling, pavement, elevation, storm track and access to transportation can all affect the risk a reader faces.
What to watch next
Watch for updated NWS statements, local emergency-management messages, school or event announcements, road-condition updates and any replacement alert. If the alert is cancelled, extended or upgraded, readers should rely on the newer official product rather than this article alone.
Update note: This article has been refreshed for CGN style, source attribution and public-safety clarity. The alert type, listed coverage area and timing remain tied to the official weather source material cited below.
Additional Reporting By: National Weather Service; NOAA; National Weather Service St. Louis