The Met Office in Britain revealed that heavy snow fell in many parts of Scotland today, and it is expected to spread southward next week, which will lead to disruption of roads and railways.
The British Meteorological Office also indicated that the thickness of snow is expected to reach 5 cm in some places by the end of Sunday, which will lead to disruption of roads and railways.
According to a statement issued by the Meteorological Office this morning, certain regions of northern Scotland may receive around 10 cm of snow during the next two days.
Northern Ireland may also get up to 5cm of snow on higher ground on Monday, with a yellow warning in effect from 3 a.m. until the end of the day.
For the most of next week, north-east England, Yorkshire and the Humber, eastern England, south-east England, and London will be under a yellow health alert.
Forecasters predict the snow to drift south during the week, with wintry weather expected in northern England on Tuesday.
Honor Creswick, a Met Office meteorologist, stated, "It will be quite chilly in the north of Scotland.
"We will expect increasing amounts of snowfall and warnings throughout the week, with accumulation probable near the conclusion.
"The warning is for 2cm to 5cm of snow, and we expect snow accumulation throughout the week.
"On Tuesday, additional rain will transition to snow as it moves eastward over the UK, with longer periods of snow and higher accumulations at low levels in northern Scotland and northern England.
"This is where we may see 5cm to 10cm of snow in the lower places.
"There is a very slim possibility that the South will see some of it."
Storm Henk produced significant flooding earlier this month, killing two people, and more than 170 flood alerts are still in place.