Partial Solar Eclipse
12 June 2029
Greatest eclipse at 04:04 UT · Arctic, Scandinavia, Alaska, northern Asia
Where it’s visible
Arctic, Scandinavia, Alaska, northern Asia.
Key numbers
| Greatest eclipse | 04:04 UT · 12 June 2029 |
| Point of greatest eclipse | 66.8°N 66.2°W |
| Maximum magnitude | 0.458 |
Source: NASA GSFC Besselian elements. Local start, peak and end times — and how much of the Sun is covered from your town — depend strongly on where you are.
What you’ll see
During a partial solar eclipse the Moon covers only part of the Sun’s disc — no path of totality touches Earth. The Sun becomes a crescent, deepest near the region of greatest eclipse. Certified eclipse glasses are required for the entire event.
The Moon Explorer app computes this eclipse’s circumstances for your exact location — local times, the local obscuration — entirely offline, and can remind you the day before and on the day.
Track this eclipse in Moon ExplorerDates and times are in Universal Time (UT). The free Moon Explorer app for Android converts everything to your local time and your exact location — fully offline, with no ads or accounts.