Sky over Jersey

Eclipses visible from Jersey

Local times and visibility for upcoming solar and lunar eclipses.

In 30 days

Partial solar eclipse

Wednesday, 12 August 2026

From Jersey, the Moon covers about 94% of the Sun at maximum. It stays a partial eclipse here, though it is total along a narrow path elsewhere.

94%of the Sun covered
19:17maximum
11°above horizon, west

Eclipse times · 12 Aug 2026 · Jersey time

18:21Partial begins20° up
19:17Maximum11° up
20:10Partial ends2° up

That day the Sun rises 05:55 and sets 20:30.

The Sun will be low in the west (about 11° up at maximum), so pick a spot with a clear, open horizon that way. Buildings, cliffs and high ground can hide the later stages.
Watch safely: never look directly at the Sun without certified eclipse glasses (marked to the ISO 12312-2 standard). Ordinary sunglasses are not safe. Never look through binoculars, a telescope or an optical camera viewfinder unless a proper solar filter is fitted securely over the front. Watching on a phone screen will not harm your eyes, but take care not to glance at the Sun while aiming, and a solar filter over the lens protects the camera too. Even a small uncovered part of the Sun can permanently harm your eyes.

Eclipses to come

The next solar and lunar eclipses, and whether each can be seen from Jersey.

What is an eclipse?

Eclipses happen when the Sun, Earth and Moon align.

The Sun on the left, the small Moon in the middle, and Earth on the right. The Moon casts a narrow dark umbra that reaches a small band on Earth, where a total solar eclipse is seen, inside a wider light penumbra where a partial eclipse is seen. The rest of Earth is outside the shadow.TotalPartialpenumbraumbraSunMoonEarth

Total solar eclipse shown · not to scale

A solar eclipse happens when the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun. From within the Moon’s shadow, it appears to cover part or all of the Sun.

Umbra

The narrow central shadow where the Sun is completely hidden. Where it reaches Earth, observers see a total solar eclipse.

Penumbra

The wider outer shadow where only part of the Sun is hidden. Observers here see a partial solar eclipse.

Learn more about how eclipses work ↗

Positions and times are calculated for Jersey (49.18°N, 2.12°W) using the open-source Astronomy Engine library. Times are shown in Jersey local time and rounded to the nearest minute. Sun and Moon heights are degrees above the horizon. Actual visibility depends on cloud and a clear horizon.