Abstract Tibetan Plateau snow cover exhibits notable subseasonal variability and plays a crucial role in influencing the atmosphere. This study employs numerical experiments to investigate the atmospheric feedback resulting from extreme anomalous snow cover events on the Tibetan Plateau, with a focus on both local and nonlocal atmospheric temperatures. The findings reveal that diabatic heating, directly induced by these events, leads to a local surface energy cooling response over the Tibetan Plateau, contributing to a reduction in local temperatures. This cooling effect amplifies local atmospheric temperature anomalies associated with extreme anomalous Tibetan Plateau snow cover events, constituting approximately 50% of the total final local surface air temperature anomalies. Furthermore, the Tibetan Plateau snow cover, through adiabatic processes, exerts a nonlocal influence on atmospheric temperature and circulation. The atmospheric temperature responses downstream of the Tibetan Plateau vary at different heights and regions, featuring both cold and warm anomaly responses. These variations depend on the relative contributions of horizontal advection and vertical advection in adiabatic heating.