The total lunar eclipse on September 7–8, 2025 (UTC) will be visible to ~85% of the world’s population—totality from Europe, Africa, Asia, and Australia; not visible across most of North or South America (only edge regions get a partial view). Time and Date
When (UTC):
- Penumbral begins 15:28 → Partial 16:27 → Totality 17:30–18:52 (peak 18:11) → Partial ends 19:56 → Penumbral ends 20:55. Totality length: ~1h 22m. Time and Date
Where you’ll see TOTALITY (clear skies permitting):
- Europe: Most of the continent, including UK, Ireland, Spain, France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Greece, Turkey, Scandinavia, Balkans, Eastern Europe, western Russia. (A few far-west locations see only partial.) Time and Date
- Africa: All regions—Morocco to South Africa, Egypt, Nigeria, Kenya, Tanzania and more. Time and Date
- Asia: Middle East (e.g., UAE, Saudi Arabia, Israel), Central & South Asia (India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka), SE Asia (Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, Philippines), East Asia (China, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan). Time and Date
- Australia: Nationwide totality (New Zealand is mainly partial). Time and Date
Partial-only edge views:
- Western North America (e.g., Hawaii); eastern South America (e.g., parts of Brazil/Uruguay); portions of far-western Europe (e.g., Portugal/Lisbon). Most of continental U.S./Canada/Mexico will not see it. Time and Date
Official sources: NASA lists the Sept 7, 2025 event as a total lunar eclipse visible from Europe, Africa, Asia, Australia; the next total eclipse for North America is March 2–3, 2026


