Stargazing in Oxford tonight
United Kingdom · 51.75°, -1.26°
Fair
Fair — stars visible, but not the best conditions.
- ›A waning crescent (18% lit) only mildly brightens the sky.
- ›The Sun never fully sets into darkness tonight (bright summer twilight) — but great for noctilucent clouds.
Your sky map — scrub through time
A live map of the sky above Oxford: the Moon, planets, bright stars and constellations, exactly where they are. Drag the sliders to move through the night — or forward and back by days — and watch everything shift.
Drag the sliders to travel through time — watch the Moon, planets and constellations rise, set and shift. Positions are computed live for Oxford.
Tonight's sky in Oxford
Planets visible tonight
Best nights to stargaze — next two weeks
Ranked by how dark the sky will be (less Moon = better). Pair with a clear-sky forecast on the night.
The 12 August 2026 solar eclipse from Oxford
From Oxford this is a partial eclipse — about 92% of the Sun is covered at maximum, around 19:12 local time. Partial phases begin ~18:16 and end ~20:06.
⚠︎ Never look at the partial phase without certified solar-eclipse glasses.
Full 2026 eclipse guide →Upcoming sky events from Oxford
Stargazing in Oxford — FAQ
Is tonight good for stargazing in Oxford?
Fair — stars visible, but not the best conditions. A waning crescent (18% lit) only mildly brightens the sky. Check the live cloud forecast above, which updates through the day.
What planets are visible from Oxford tonight?
Tonight you can spot Venus, Mars, Saturn above the horizon from Oxford, conditions permitting.
When is the best night to stargaze in Oxford soon?
The darkest upcoming night is around Tue 14 Jul, when the Moon is only 0% lit.
Times are local to Oxford (Europe/London). Astronomical data is computed from established models; the cloud forecast is live from Open-Meteo and refreshes through the day. Always confirm with a live forecast before travelling to a dark-sky site.