Solar eclipse · Saros 128

Annular Solar Eclipse

June 1, 2030 — visible across Europe, northern Africa, Middle East, Asia, Arctic, Alaska.

About this eclipse

What happens
Along the central path the Moon sits inside the Sun's disk, leaving a brilliant "ring of fire" for up to 05m21s. Surrounding regions see a partial eclipse.
Where it’s visible
Europe, northern Africa, Middle East, Asia, Arctic, Alaska
Annular path
Algeria, Tunisia, Greece, Turkey, Russia, northern China, Japan

Geometry & timing

Greatest eclipse (TD)
06:29:13 · ΔT 78s
Greatest eclipse (UTC)
06:27:55
Saros series
128
Magnitude
0.9443
Greatest point
57°N, 80°E; Sun alt 55°; width 250 km
Central duration
05m21s

Sources

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

Path of annularity

The centerline and annularity band are self-computed from public-domain NASA/Espenak Besselian elements — matching NASA’s published path to within ~0.15 km. Lunar-limb relief and local terrain can shift the true edges by ~1–3 km.

See it from your location

Your eclipse type, peak coverage, and contact times — in your local time.

More eclipses

Related events — same Saros family and nearby dates.

Browse all →