Complete archive · 2001 – 2100

All Solar Eclipses

69 solar eclipses — 15 past, 54 upcoming.

69
Eclipses
23
Total
43
Annular
3
Hybrid
54
Future
About solar eclipses

One of nature's most spectacular events

A solar eclipse occurs when the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun, casting a shadow on our planet. Because the Moon's apparent size almost perfectly matches the Sun's, the alignment produces three distinct spectacles: a total eclipse plunges a narrow corridor into sudden darkness; an annular eclipse leaves a brilliant "ring of fire" when the Moon is slightly too far away to cover the Sun completely; and a rare hybrid eclipse shifts between total and annular along its path.

Between 2001 and 2100, Earth will experience 142 solar eclipses — 67 total, 68 annular, and 7 hybrid. On average, any given location on Earth experiences a total solar eclipse roughly once every 375 years, making each one a rare opportunity worth planning for. The next total eclipse visible from Europe is 12 August 2026, with a path of totality crossing Morocco, Spain, and the Arctic.

This archive covers every eclipse with precise contact times for hundreds of cities, an interactive path-of-totality map, maximum occultation by country, and a simulated view of the sky at peak eclipse. Use the upcoming grid below to plan your next eclipse chase, or browse the archive to explore historical events.

View upcoming eclipsesSafe viewing guide →
Future

Upcoming Eclipses

54 eclipses remaining this century. Click any card for the full path, city contact times and sky simulation.

August 12, 2026
Total
Mag. 1.039
January 26, 2028
Annular
Mag. 0.921
November 14, 2031
Hybrid
Mag. 1.011
May 9, 2032
Annular
Mag. 0.996
March 30, 2033
Total
Mag. 1.046
September 12, 2034
Annular
Mag. 0.974
March 9, 2035
Annular
Mag. 0.992
September 2, 2035
Total
Mag. 1.032
January 5, 2038
Annular
Mag. 0.973
July 2, 2038
Annular
Mag. 0.991
June 21, 2039
Annular
Mag. 0.945
October 25, 2041
Annular
Mag. 0.947
April 20, 2042
Total
Mag. 1.061
August 23, 2044
Total
Mag. 1.036
February 16, 2045
Annular
Mag. 0.928
August 12, 2045
Total
Mag. 1.077
February 5, 2046
Annular
Mag. 0.923
June 11, 2048
Annular
Mag. 0.944
May 31, 2049
Annular
Mag. 0.963
March 30, 2052
Total
Mag. 1.047
January 16, 2056
Annular
Mag. 0.976
July 12, 2056
Annular
Mag. 0.988
July 1, 2057
Annular
Mag. 0.946
May 11, 2059
Total
Mag. 1.024
April 20, 2061
Total
Mag. 1.048
August 24, 2063
Total
Mag. 1.075
August 12, 2064
Total
Mag. 1.050
June 22, 2066
Annular
Mag. 0.944
June 11, 2067
Annular
Mag. 0.967
December 6, 2067
Hybrid
Mag. 1.001
April 11, 2070
Total
Mag. 1.047
March 31, 2071
Annular
Mag. 0.992
September 23, 2071
Total
Mag. 1.033
July 24, 2074
Annular
Mag. 0.984
November 15, 2077
Annular
Mag. 0.937
May 11, 2078
Total
Mag. 1.070
November 4, 2078
Annular
Mag. 0.925
May 1, 2079
Total
Mag. 1.051
October 24, 2079
Annular
Mag. 0.948
February 27, 2082
Annular
Mag. 0.930
July 3, 2084
Annular
Mag. 0.942
June 22, 2085
Annular
Mag. 0.970
December 16, 2085
Annular
Mag. 0.997
October 14, 2088
Annular
Mag. 0.973
April 10, 2089
Annular
Mag. 0.992
September 23, 2090
Total
Mag. 1.056
February 7, 2092
Annular
Mag. 0.984
July 23, 2093
Annular
Mag. 0.946
November 27, 2095
Annular
Mag. 0.933
May 22, 2096
Total
Mag. 1.074
May 11, 2097
Total
Mag. 1.054
March 21, 2099
Annular
Mag. 0.932
September 14, 2099
Total
Mag. 1.068
March 10, 2100
Annular
Mag. 0.934
Safe Viewing

Never look at the Sun without protection

Regular sunglasses and phone screens do not block enough solar radiation. Use certified ISO 12312-2 eclipse glasses at all times — except during the brief moments of totality. Permanent eye damage can occur in seconds.

Safe Viewing
Archive

Past

15 eclipses since 2001, most recently February 17, 2026.