Lunar eclipse · Saros 130

Total Lunar Eclipse

June 26, 2029 — visible across Americas, Europe, Africa, Middle East.

About this eclipse

What happens
The Moon passes fully into Earth's umbral shadow and glows a deep coppery red — totality lasts about 102 minutes. Visible anywhere the Moon is above the horizon.
Where it’s visible
Americas, Europe, Africa, Middle East

Geometry & timing

Greatest eclipse (TD)
03:23:22 · ΔT 77s
Greatest eclipse (UTC)
03:22:05
Saros series
130
Magnitude
2.8266 / 1.8436 (penumbral / umbral)
Moon overhead at greatest
23°S, 50°W
Phase durations
335.1 / 219.5 / 101.9 min

Sources

Timing and geometry from NASA’s eclipse catalogs. Verify local circumstances before you travel.

How the eclipse unfolds

PenumbraUmbraMoon

Schematic of the Moon crossing Earth’s penumbra (outer) and umbra (inner) at greatest eclipse. Visible anywhere the Moon is above the horizon: Americas, Europe, Africa, Middle East.

The Moon is above the horizon — and the eclipse visible — on the marker’s side of the dashed line (its position at greatest eclipse).

More eclipses

Related events — same Saros family and nearby dates.

Browse all →