Home   Sun, Moon & Space   Eclipses   Mar 3, 2026
Flag for Australia

March 3, 2026 — Total Lunar Eclipse — 31°52'20.4"S, 115°53'13.5"E

Mar 3, 2026 at 7:33 pm
Max View in 31°52'20.4"S, 115°53'13.5"E
Global Event: Total Lunar Eclipse
Local Type: Total Lunar Eclipse, in 31°52'20.4"S, 115°53'13.5"E
Begins: Tue, Mar 3, 2026 at 6:43 pm
Maximum: Tue, Mar 3, 2026 at 7:33 pm 1.150 Magnitude
Ends: Tue, Mar 3, 2026 at 10:23 pm
Duration: 3 hours, 40 minutes

All times shown on this page are local time.

Location

March 3, 2026 — Total Lunar Eclipse — 31°52'20.4"S, 115°53'13.5"E

Live Eclipse Animation will start at:
Live Eclipse Animation has ended.
You are using an outdated browser, to view the animation please update or switch to a modern browser. Alternatively you can view the old animation by clicking here.

The animation shows what the eclipse approximately looks like. Stages and times of the eclipse are outlined below.

TimePhaseEventDirectionAltitude
4:44 pm Tue, Mar 3Not directly visiblePenumbral Eclipse begins Below horizonMap direction East 97°
-25.4°
5:50 pm Tue, Mar 3Not directly visiblePartial Eclipse begins Below horizonMap direction East 88°
-11.8°
6:43 pm Tue, Mar 3RisingMoonrise Rising, but the combination of a very low moon and the total eclipse phase will make the moon so dim that it will be extremely difficult to view until moon gets higher in the sky or the total phase ends.Map direction East 82°
-0.2°
7:04 pm Tue, Mar 3
Total Eclipse begins Total moon eclipse starts - completely red moon.
Moon close to horizon, so make sure you have free sight to East.
Map direction East 79°
3.7°
7:33 pm Tue, Mar 3
Maximum Eclipse Moon is closest to the center of the shadow.Map direction East-northeast 75°
9.6°
8:02 pm Tue, Mar 3
Total Eclipse ends Total moon eclipse ends.Map direction East-northeast 71°
15.4°
9:17 pm Tue, Mar 3
Partial Eclipse ends Partial moon eclipse ends.Map direction East-northeast 59°
29.6°
10:23 pm Tue, Mar 3
Penumbral Eclipse ends The Earth's penumbra ends.Map direction Northeast 45°
40.7°

The curvature of the shadow's path and the apparent rotation of the Moon's disk is due to the Earth's rotation.


Eclipses and Transits Visible in 31°52'20.4"S, 115°53'13.5"E

Eclipse Visibility From 31°52'20.4"S, 115°53'13.5"EVisibility Worldwide
Sep 7–8, 2025 Total Lunar EclipseTotal Lunar Eclipse
Mar 3, 2026 Total Lunar EclipseTotal Lunar Eclipse
Feb 21, 2027 Penumbral Lunar EclipsePenumbral Lunar Eclipse
Jul 6–7, 2028 Partial Lunar EclipsePartial Lunar Eclipse
Jul 22, 2028 Partial Solar EclipseTotal Solar Eclipse

Note: Click on the date link for details in 31°52'20.4"S, 115°53'13.5"E, or the path map image for global details. Currently shown eclipse is highlighted.

Other eclipses visible in 31°52'20.4"S, 115°53'13.5"E

Other eclipses worldwide