A major cold front is on its way to the UK with snow and ice warnings in place.
Parts of southern Scotland and areas around the north east and north west of England – including Lancashire and Cumbria – will experience the bulk of this weather.
New weather maps have shown areas that will be hit the most while also indicating which regions may not experience any snow at all – with the brunt of the bad weather forecasted for Monday and Tuesday.
According to WXCharts.com, the unsettled and snowy conditions will hit northern parts of Scotland as the cold front makes its appearance on Sunday November 17.
Moving into Monday, northern Scotland will see the most of the snow with Wales also likely to experience a battering of the white stuff.
Areas including the Midlands and Birmingham and areas more south including London and the south coast of England, could escape the snow.
The North West looks to escape the snow later on Monday with parts of east England also likely to escape these snowy conditions.
Yorks/Humber, North West and North East areas also look likely to not experience any snow coming the part of Monday.
Come Tuesday, the cold front will fully take its grip on the southern parts of the UK with the northern regions escaping the worst of it as all three regions make a lucky escape.
Settling snow is forecast to largely be confined to the hills and mountains with London, Cardiff, Brighton, Surrey, Oxford, Bristol, Northamtpon, Bath and Southampton likely to escape the snow on Tuesday, too.
Later on Tuesday, the snowy conditions look to move to West and East Midlands and East Anglia as regions including South West including Cornwall, Devon, Dorset, Gloucestershire, Somerset and Wiltshire, South East including Brighton, Portsmouth, Southampton and Reading and London are likely not to experience snow.
Met Office Deputy Chief Meteorologist Rebekah Hicks explains: “A notable early winter cold spell will arrive across the north from Sunday and will likely reach all parts of the UK by midweek.
She added: “Temperatures will drop as a northerly airflow develops, bringing in colder Arctic air.
“This introduces the possibility of snow, initially over high ground in the north from Sunday, with gusty winds also a potential hazard.”
Met Office spokesperson, Grahame Madge, added: “It’s going to get colder over the coming days – it’s still pretty mild in the south but there is a cold front that will be sinking south across northern parts of the UK.
“There’s going to be some wintriness in the hills, for example, tonight and into tomorrow.”
The Met Office has warned snow and ice could lead to disruption in some parts of the UK with Brits strongly advised to pay close attention if driving.