Stella Eclipses Aug 12, 2026 Eclipse time in Exeter94% covered
Total Solar Eclipse in Exeter August 12, 2026 reaches maximum over Exeter at Aug 12, 7:15 PM GMT+1 . The city sees a partial eclipse with the Sun 12° above the horizon.
LOCAL MAXIMUM Aug 12, 7:15 PM GMT+1
TYPE PARTIAL
COVERED 94%
MAG 0.95
SUN ALT 12°
Partial begins Aug 12, 6:20 PM GMT+1
Partial ends Aug 12, 8:10 PM GMT+1
UTC check: maximum 18:15 UTC. Computed from Besselian elements at the city coordinate; confirm exact local circumstances before travel.
What Exeter sees
Maximum eclipse Aug 12, 7:15 PM GMT+1 — 94% of the Sun covered, magnitude 0.95.
Viewing geometry The Sun is about 12° above the horizon at maximum. The city coordinate is roughly 718 km from the computed centerline.
Totality Exeter is outside totality. Travel inside the path for the corona and full daylight darkness. Safety & source notes Local timing is useful for planning, but safe viewing rules still matter more than the clock.
Path and city marker
Centerline Band of totality City coordinate
The map shows Stella’s computed path plus the city coordinate used for the local timing above. Terrain, buildings, clouds, and your exact address can change the practical view.
See it from your location Your eclipse type, peak coverage, and contact times — in your local time.
Use my location Dark-sky places near Exeter 51 km (31 mi) · Dark-Sky Park Exmoor Dark Sky Reserve
View → 75 km (47 mi) · Dark-Sky Park Bodmin Moor Dark Sky Landscape
View → 130 km (81 mi) · Dark-Sky Park Brecon Beacons Dark Sky Reserve
View → Next steps Keep planning the eclipse from Exeter. Compare the full path, nearby dark-sky stays, protected places, and the field guide before you commit.
Nearby eclipse city times Local circumstances change fast near the path. Compare nearby city coordinates.
Full eclipse page → Eclipse time in Exeter: FAQ
When is maximum? Aug 12, 7:15 PM GMT+1
How much of the Sun is covered? 94% at maximum.
Is this safe to watch without glasses? No. Use certified solar protection except during totality, and only if you are inside the total path.