Denver catches a slight partial eclipse — a small nibble at the Sun’s edge around 11:46 AM. You’ll need eclipse glasses and a clear horizon to notice it.
A slight partial — a small nibble at the Sun’s edge.
SKY · SOLAR ECLIPSES · USA
When's the next solar eclipse you can actually see from Denver, and what will it look like from here? Below is each upcoming eclipse that reaches Denver — how much of the Sun gets covered, the local date and time of day, and whether the Sun is even above your horizon when it happens.
Denver catches a slight partial eclipse — a small nibble at the Sun’s edge around 11:46 AM. You’ll need eclipse glasses and a clear horizon to notice it.
A slight partial — a small nibble at the Sun’s edge.
Times are computed for Denver from the greatest-eclipse instant in the NASA eclipse canon · local time. For to-the-second contact times, check a local-circumstances tool nearer the date.
A slight partial — a small nibble at the Sun’s edge, around 11:46 AM local.
Also on the calendar but not visible from Denver: annular solar eclipse on 2027-02-06, total solar eclipse on 2027-08-02, annular solar eclipse on 2028-01-26, total solar eclipse on 2028-07-22, annular solar eclipse on 2030-06-01, total solar eclipse on 2030-11-25. See where each is visible on the global eclipse calendar.
This page is “what Denversees.” To see the path of totality drawn across the map and which countries it crosses, the Sun canvas has the full picture.