The eclipse from Madrid: 99% is not total
≈20:27 CEST · ~99% partial — deep, but NOT total
No. Madrid sees a very deep (~99%) partial eclipse around ≈20:27 CEST — impressive, but daylight never fully breaks and eclipse glasses must stay on at all times. Totality requires travelling into the path. The crucial 1%: Madrid never goes dark, the corona never appears, and glasses stay on the whole time. The path is a ~2-hour drive north — this is the year to make it.
Frequently asked questions
Is the eclipse total in Madrid?
No. Madrid sees a very deep (~99%) partial eclipse around ≈20:27 CEST — impressive, but daylight never fully breaks and eclipse glasses must stay on at all times. Totality requires travelling into the path.
What time is the eclipse in Madrid?
Maximum eclipse over Madrid comes around ≈20:27 CEST on Wednesday, August 12, 2026, with the Sun low in the western sky. Exact-to-the-second local circumstances will be added here as the date approaches.
Do I need eclipse glasses?
Yes, for the entire event — at 99% partial there is NO safe naked-eye moment. Certified ISO 12312-2 glasses only; sunglasses never qualify.
What else happens that night?
The Perseid meteor shower peaks the very same night under a moonless sky — the best Perseid conditions since 2018. Stay out after the eclipse: up to ~100 meteors per hour.
That same night: the Perseids
The new moon that makes the eclipse possible also makes August 12-13 a perfect meteor night — the Perseids peak at up to ~100/hour. After the eclipse, keep looking up.
More for your sky
Full eclipse guide · Reykjavík · Oviedo (Asturias) · Bilbao · Zaragoza · Valencia · ISS · Madrid · Aurora · Madrid