Updated on: December 24, 2025 / 8:13 PM PST / CBS LA
Add CBS News on GoogleA powerful winter storm has arrived in Southern California for the Christmas holiday, bringing hey rain and dangerous flooding.
The National Weather Service issued several warnings and advisories as the atmospheric system over the region is expected to produce between 3 to 6 inches of rain in the coastal and valley areas, and 5 to 11 inches in the foothills and mountains.
An emphasis has been placed on burn scar areas that are more susceptible to flooding, mudslides and debris flows. The NWS has issued a flood watch for much of Southern California through Friday afternoon as rainfall rates could potentially exceed 1 inch per hour during the peak hours of the storm. Weather officials said flash flooding has already occurred in some areas, causing dangerous conditions.
An NWS flash flood warning is also in effect until 6 p.m. for the southwestern parts of LA County and the southeastern parts of Ventura County. These areas include Thousand Oaks, Simi Valley, Malibu, Woodland Hills, Santa Monica, Beverly Hills, Hollywood, Burbank and Pasadena. The warning was initially set to expire at noon, but weather officials extended it after local law enforcement reported hey rain across the region.
"LA County's gusts pushing over 60 mph, downing trees and power lines in many areas—so this storm is evolving exactly as we he been talking about, and continue to encourage everyone to take these warnings and messages seriously as the accumulative effects of the rain will result in increasingly dangerous and life-threatening conditions as we head through the holiday time period," said Ariel Cohen, National Weather Service meteorologist in charge.
Peak rainfall timing on Wednesday:
Santa Barbara County: 3 to 7 a.m.Ventura County: 5 a.m. to 1 p.m. Los Angeles County: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.CBS LA has issued a Next Weather Alert through Christmas Day on Thursday for all Southern California communities. A Next Weather Watch has been issued for Friday, which could be upgraded if weather conditions persist.
"Especially in LA County, it's going to continue to get worse," Cohen said. "It will take less and less rain to create more and more impacts as the ground becomes saturated – expect many canyon highways and roadways, areas with terrain to become impassable as rockslides and mudslides increase in severity in coverage."
Cohen urged residents to oid unnecessary trel during the storm.
Showers are expected to last through Friday and Saturday, with conditions finally drying out by the start of next week.
Evacuation orders and warningsEvacuation orders he been issued for several burn scar areas, including the Palisades, Eaton, Franklin, Kenneth, Agua, Owen, and Agua fire areas.
"If you decide to stay in your home in an evacuated area ... it could be difficult to lee once the storm begins," said Los Angeles County Sheriff Robert Luna during a news conference Tuesday.
The Orange County Sheriff's Department has issued an evacuation order for Trabuco Creek, Bell Canyon and Hot Springs Canyon near the Airport Fire burn scar. Officials he established a shelter for residents located in evacuation zones at the Foothill Ranch Library Program Annex at 27002 Cabriole Way.
On Monday afternoon, ahead of the storm, the city of Los Angeles issued an Evacuation Warning for those located in the burn scar areas from the Hurst and Sunset Fires, as well as the neighborhood of Mandeville Canyon. The warning will remain in effect until 11 p.m. on Thursday.
San Bernardino County officials issued evacuation warnings for residents who live in Lytle Creek, Forest Falls, Seven Oaks, Angelus Oaks, Northeast Yucaipa and areas of Oak Glen. They warn communities about the potential for mud and debris flows caused by the hey rainfall.
Storm-related closuresAs the hey rainfall has already started to impact several communities across Southern California, amusement parks including Six Flags Magic Mountain in Valencia and Knott's Berry Farm in Buena Park he announced they will be closed on Christmas Eve due to the "inclement weather."
The LA Zoo also announced it will be closed on Wednesday, "out of an abundance of caution."
On Tuesday night, LA County Public Works and Caltrans officials implemented road closures due to potential storm impacts and recovery work.
Los Angeles County road closures:
Malibu Canyon Road Soft closure (emergency vehicles only) between Francisco Ranch Road/Adamson Flats Road and just south of Piuma RoadTuna Canyon Road Hard closure between approximately 2870 Tuna Canyon Road (Gate) and Pacific Coast HighwayChantry Flat Road Soft closure (emergency vehicles only) between 1209 Arno Drive to Chantry Flat Recreation AreaGlendora Mountain Road hard closure between North of Big Dalton Canyon Road to East Fork RoadCaltrans road closures:
Topanga Canyon Boulevard/State Route 27 is fully closed between Pacific Coast Highway and Grand View DrivePacific Coast Highway (State Route 1) is expected to remain open, with crews actively monitoring areas most susceptible to debris flows5 Freeway in Sun Valley, all lanes in both directions closed around 2 p.m. between Lankershim Boulevard and Penrose Street due to floodingThe City of Malibu Public Safety Department has issued multiple road closures due to flooding. Topanga and Malibu Canyons, Rainsford Place, Bonsall Drive at Arizona crossing are all closed.
A complete list of road closures in LA County can be found here.
State and local responses to stormOn Wednesday, California Gov. Gin Newsom declared a state of emergency for several Southern California counties, including Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside and San Bernardino, in response to the late winter storm.
The emergency proclamation will allow for the rapid mobilization of state resources to support local governments under the California Disaster Assistance Act and the deployment of the California National Guard, if needed. The proclamation also allows Caltrans to seek federal assistance to repair damaged roads and highways.
"California is acting early and decisively to do all we can to get ahead of dangerous winter storms," Newsom said. "The state has pre-positioned resources, activated emergency authorities, and we are working closely with local partners to protect communities and keep Californians safe."
In preparation for the storm, Newsom's office said the governor directed state agencies to pre-deploy emergency response resources, including 55 fire engines, 10 swiftwater rescue teams, five hand crews, five dozers, four loaders, three helicopters, an incident management team, an Urban Search and Rescue Team, and over 300 personnel.
Issuing her own Declaration of Local Emergency, Mayor Karen Bass urged all residents to stay home, remain vigilant and oid unnecessary trel during the storm.
"Throughout the duration of this holiday storm, firefighters, police officers, public works crews, traffic engineers, recreation and parks staff, and the entire City family he worked to address impacts to keep Angelenos safe – from swift water rescues to removing downed trees and coordinating safe evacuations," Bass said. "We are making every resource and tool ailable to help facilitate this continued response effort, including a declaration of a local emergency that I signed to ensure that City teams he the required resources in the days ahead."
She added that the city had pre-deployed teams that were ready to respond when the storm hit. As of Wednesday evening, her office said that the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (LADWP) crews were working to restore power to about 8,850 reported outages.
Earlier in the morning, her office said there were as many as 32 reported downed power lines. The Los Angeles Fire Department (LAFD) responded to multiple river rescue incidents and the Los Angeles Police Department has responded to dozens of traffic incidents.
Rainfall totals so farHere are rainfall totals from across Southern California over the past 24 hours as of 3:30 p.m. Tuesday, according to the NWS:
Bel Air: 3.09 inchesCuilver City: 2.07 inches Beverly Hills: 2.56 inches Downtown Los Angeles: 2.56 inchesAgoura: 3.65 inches Canoga Park: 4.29 inches East Pasadena: 2.52 inches Claremont: 1.84 inchesMount Wilson: 5.78 inches Lancaster: 2.18 inches Burbank: 3.08 inchesLong Beach: 1.58 inchesBrea: 1.81 inchesTustin: 1.38 inchesRiverside: .48 inchesAustin Turner contributed to this report.
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