SKY · MILKY WAY · USA

Can You See the Milky Way from San Antonio?

Good news for San Antonio: tonight the galactic core climbs to about 30° above the southern horizon in a dark sky. With dark skies and no Moon, the bright heart of the Milky Way is on show.

GALACTIC CORE TONIGHT · SAN ANTONIO
VerdictExcellent — core rides high
Core height30° up
Look towardsouthern sky
Best by2:31 AM
MoonWaxing Crescent · 23%

Core altitude computed for San Antonio (29.4°, -98.5°) during tonight's dark hours.

Milky Way season & the Moon for San Antonio

Core season hereRoughly April to July, best around June.
Dark by9:41 PM
Until6:36 AM

A modest Moon — bright planets and constellations are fine, faint detail less so.

The Milky Way is faint and easily lost to light pollution and moonlight. Even when the core is high, you need a genuinely dark sky — well away from city lights — and ideally a night near the new Moon to see it well from San Antonio.

San Antonio right now

A dark, cloudless sky is everything for the Milky Way — a quick check of tonight's cloud cover for San Antoniotells you whether it's worth the trip out of town.

More sky over San Antonio

SEE IT ON THE MAP

The live sky map shows the day/night line over San Antonio in real time.

Open the live sky map →