I've been to Syracuse just a couple of times, and only in the summer. So I can't vouch for the winters, but others I met there could. Syracuse gets snow from systems crossing both Lake Erie and Lake Ontario, so this isn't a big surprise, but given the massive volumes of snow that places like Buffalo can get, I'm surprised that Syracuse is Number One.
Read for more.
The Top 10 Snowiest Cities in the World
Recently, though, Buffalo's huge snow-effect drops have given it a short-term edge.
"With an average annual snowfall of 124 inches, Syracuse is no stranger to snow. Records show that the city occasionally experiences heavy snowfall, with an all-time high of 192 inches in a single season. Statistics like these cement Syracuse’s status as the snowiest metropolitan area in the United States, a claim made possible by a combination of different geological factors: the city’s proximity to Lake Ontario and the regular dumping of snow by nor’easter cyclones.
Known as the economic and educational hub of Central New York, Syracuse is as famous for its weather as for its university’s Division I sports teams. The city consistently wins the Golden Snowball Award, a humorous accolade given to the city in Upstate New York with the most snowfall each season. Syracuse has won the award 14 times but has been beaten out by Buffalo since 2021. Fellow competitors Rochester and Buffalo qualify as the world’s eighth and ninth snowiest cities respectively."
Here's the problem, though. After reading this article, that quote above in particular, and getting pointed to it by
the Daily Mail article (quote: "Travel experts from TripSavvy named Syracuse, New York, the snowiest city in the world this year."
But let's read from the article now.
Sapporo, Japan: average annual snowfall 191 inches.
Chamonix, France: not clear, because the article makes it sound like it's the snowfall in the mountains, not in Chamonix itself.
Quebec City: average annual snowfall 124 inches, same as Syracuse.
St. Johns, Canada: average annual snowfall 131 inches.
Toyama, Japan: average annual snowfall 143 inches.
Erie, Pennsylvania: average annual snowfall 104 inches.
Aomori City, Japan: average annual snowfall
312 inches.
Muskegon, Michigan: average annual snowfall 76 inches (I don't know why they didn't include Houghton, MI).
Valdez, Alaska: average annual snowfall
326 inches.
So Syracuse isn't anywhere close to the snowiest city in the world. Somebody is confused out there, and that's confusing the rest of us.
I tried to find a picture that showed what it's like; there are quite a few (and videos too), many showing the almost-tunnel of the main road created by the snow-throwing trucks. But I went with this one.
By the way, remember that in many cases, global warming is making heavy winter snowfalls heavier, due to more moisture in the atmosphere (mainly) and various other regional factors, like higher lake and ocean temperatures adjacent to these snow-prone locations.