SUN · LUNAR ECLIPSE

Partial lunar eclipse of June 15, 2030

Half the Moon in Earth’s umbra — a 50% partial eclipse for Europe, Africa, Asia and Australia, with the Moon near perigee and looking large.

COUNTDOWN TO GREATEST ECLIPSE
1429days
--hrs
--min
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DateSaturday, June 15, 2030
Greatest eclipse18:33 UT
TypePartial lunar eclipse
Umbral magnitude0.50401 (50% of the Moon)
Partial phase lasts2h25m02s
Visible fromEurope, Africa, Asia, Australia
Saros series140 (25/77)

Unlike a solar eclipse, a lunar eclipse is completely safe to watch with the naked eye — no glasses, no filters. Everyone on the night side of Earth sees the same phase at the same moment.

The timeline, minute by minute

Contact times from the published canon (UT1, rounded to the minute). These instants are the same everywhere on Earth; whether you can see a given phase depends only on whether the Moon is above your horizon — check your city below.

PhaseWhat happensUT
P1Penumbral eclipse begins16:13
U1Partial eclipse begins — the Moon enters the umbra17:20
MaxGreatest eclipse18:33
U4Partial eclipse ends — the Moon leaves the umbra19:45
P4Penumbral eclipse ends20:52

What you'll see

A partial eclipse: Earth's umbra takes a clean, dark bite out of 50% of the Moon's diameter. Easily visible to the naked eye — the curved edge of Earth's shadow on the Moon is the same sight that told ancient astronomers the Earth is round. The Moon is 0.8 days after perigee — a large moon. It sits in Ophiuchus for the night.

Who sees it — city by city

Computed from the canon contact times and the Moon's real position over each city (geometric altitude; near the horizon, buildings and haze matter). “Maximum” is the local clock time of greatest eclipse. Each city links to its own eclipse page with the full calendar.

CitySeesMaximum (local)Moon at max
New YorkNot visiblebelow horizon
Los AngelesNot visiblebelow horizon
Mexico CityNot visiblebelow horizon
São PauloNot visiblebelow horizon
Buenos AiresNot visiblebelow horizon
LondonNot visiblebelow horizon
MadridRises during — later phasesJun 15, 8:33 PM-11°
BerlinRises during — later phasesJun 15, 8:33 PM-6°
RomeRises during — later phasesJun 15, 8:33 PM-1°
LagosRises during — later phasesJun 15, 7:33 PM8° — very low
CairoEntire eclipseJun 15, 9:33 PM18°
JohannesburgEntire eclipseJun 15, 8:33 PM41°
IstanbulRises during — later phasesJun 15, 9:33 PM10° — very low
DubaiEntire eclipseJun 15, 10:33 PM36°
DelhiEntire eclipseJun 16, 12:03 AM39°
TokyoSets during — earlier phasesJun 16, 3:33 AM10°
SydneyEntire eclipseJun 16, 4:33 AM29°
AucklandSets during — earlier phasesJun 16, 6:33 AM11°

Your city not here? Every one of our 132 city pages carries this eclipse — find yours.

Keep exploring

Eclipse predictions by Fred Espenak (NASA GSFC / EclipseWise.com) — 21st Century Canon of Lunar Eclipses, JPL DE430 ephemerides, Herald/Sinnott shadow model. Contact times UT1. City visibility computed by LiveEarthViewer from the canon instants. Source table checked 2026.