How much snow did Michigan get in blizzard? Totals so far

Michigan’s Upper Peninsula was the hardest hit by snow over the last 48 hours, according to the National Weather Service.
An observer station two miles south of Herman, in L’Anse Township in Michigan’s Baraga County, reported 36 inches of snow in the last 48 hours, including 34 in the most recent 24-hour period, as of Monday morning, according to the National Weather Service.
The next highest total was 35 inches at 12:06 p.m. in Spalding in Menominee County, the southernmost UP county along Lake Michigan.
The Southeast Forest Lake area of Alcona County in Michigan’s northeastern part of the lower peninsula got hit with 31.9 inches through 7 a.m. Monday.
Both Menominee and Baraga County’s Three Lakes in the U.P. received 31 inches of snow from Saturday morning to Monday morning, the agency said.
Traverse City snowstorm
A snowstorm is seen Monday, March 16, 2026, outside the Park Place Hotel in Traverse City.
National Mine, which is in the U.P.’s Marquette County, reported 30 inches of snow as of 6:30 a.m. Monday, the weather service said.
Here are the 24-hour snowfall totals reported by spotters near these Michigan locations:
- Negaunee, 29.4 inches
- Cusino Lake, 27.5 inches
- Petoskey, 24.6 inches
- Round Lake, 24 inches
- Cheboygan, 24 inches
- Saint Ignace, 23 inches
- Iron Mountain, 21.6 inches
- Arnold, 21.5 inches
- Vanderbilt, 21 inches
- Manistique, 20.4 inches
- Gaastra, 20 inches
- Pellston, 20 inches
- Cedarville, 20 inches
- Trout Lake, 20 inches
- Escanaba, 19 inches
- Drummond Island, 18.5 inches
- Charlevoix, 18 inches
- Newberry, 18 inches
- Bellaire, 18 inches
- Wakefield, 18 inches
- Harbor Springs, 16.5 inches
- Lake Ann, 16 inches
- Cedar, 16 inches
- Grawn, 15 inches
- Sault Ste. Marie, 6.4 inches
- Hancock, 4 inches
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