Skip to content

Solar & lunar eclipses, 2026–2030

Dates and times of greatest eclipse, sourced from the NASA Goddard Eclipse Catalogue.

Upcoming (18)

Date Type Visibility Duration
2026-08-12 Total solar Greenland, Iceland, northern Spain 2 min 18 s
2026-08-28 Partial lunar Americas, Africa, Europe 93% obscured
2027-02-06 Annular solar Chile, Argentina, South Atlantic 7 min 51 s
2027-07-18 Partial lunar Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe
2027-08-02 Total solar Spain, Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Somalia 6 min 23 s
2028-01-26 Annular solar Ecuador, Peru, Brazil, Suriname, Portugal, Spain 10 min 27 s
2028-07-22 Total solar Australia, New Zealand 5 min 10 s
2028-12-31 Total lunar Europe, Africa, Asia, Australia 71 min totality
2029-01-14 Partial solar North America
2029-06-12 Partial solar Arctic, Scandinavia, Russia
2029-06-26 Total lunar Americas, Europe, Africa 103 min totality
2029-07-11 Partial solar South America, Antarctica
2029-12-05 Partial solar South Atlantic, Antarctica
2029-12-20 Total lunar Americas, Europe, Africa
2030-06-01 Annular solar Algeria, Tunisia, Greece, Turkey, Russia, China, Japan 5 min 21 s
2030-06-15 Partial lunar Americas, Europe, Africa
2030-11-25 Total solar Namibia, Botswana, South Africa, Australia 3 min 44 s
2030-12-09 Penumbral lunar Africa, Europe, Americas

Past (2)

2026-02-17 Annular solar Antarctica; partial across South Africa, Indian Ocean
2026-03-03 Total lunar East Asia, Australia, Pacific, western Americas

About these dates

Eclipse dates and durations come from the NASA Goddard eclipse predictions computed by Fred Espenak. The date shown is the date of greatest eclipse in Universal Time — local dates may differ by one day. Totality and annularity durations are for the maximum point on the central path; observers off-axis see shorter events.