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Colorado at Record Low Snowpack

The image displays a colored map of Colorado, indicating different risk levels, with higher risk areas shown in red near Denver.

Posted on February 3, 2026  

According to the Jan. 27 update from the National Integrated Drought Information System (NIDIS), 52% of the state is currently experiencing some level of drought with 30% in the Moderate Drought category, 17% in a Severe Drought, 5% in the Extreme Drought category, and 17% of Colorado is Abnormally Dry. The map featured above shows the drought conditions on Jan. 27.

The image shows a legend for drought categories in Colorado, indicating percentages of areas impacted by varying drought levels.

Denver Water’s supply comes from the snow that falls in the Upper South Platte River Basin and the Upper Colorado River Basin — the mountainous areas of Boulder, Douglas, Grand, Jefferson, Park and Summit counties.

As of Jan. 26 the snowpack in Denver Water’s collection areas stood at 41% of normal in the South Platte watershed and 56% of normal in the Colorado River watershed. Cumulative precipitation in the Colorado River watershed was tracking at 69% of average and the South Platte River watershed was tracking at 61% of average.

The snowpack season runs to mid-to-late April, so there’s still just over a couple of months to go in the snow collection season. Mountain snowpack is critical because when the snow melts in the spring it flows down streams and replenishes Denver Water’s reservoirs.

Denver Water’s supply reservoir contents as of Jan. 26 are represented in the table below. Reservoir totals are 82% full and were 86% full this time last year.

 

Reservoir Percent Full: Current Percent Full: Historical Median
Antero 90% 77%
Chatfield 93% 87%
Cheesman 80% 80%
Dillon 76% 88%
Eleven Mile 101% 102%
Gross 49% 64%
Marston 84% 67%
Ralston 61% 71%
Strontia Springs 88% 91%

Colorado remains at record lows in terms of snowpack at just 56 percent of median as of February 2.

Map of Colorado showing snow water equivalent percentages (1991-2020 median) as of February 2, 2026. Color-coded data ranges.

 

Percent of median by river basin:

Yampa and White: 63

Colorado Headwaters: 54

Laramie and North Platte: 67

South Platte: 58

Gunnison: 56

Arkansas: 47

Upper Rio Grande: 50

San Miguel, Dolores, Animas and San Juan: 49

Information provided by USDA, NIDIS, and CWCB and Denver Water.

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