Stargazing in Southend-on-Sea tonight
United Kingdom · 51.54°, 0.71°
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 Southend-on-Sea: 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 Southend-on-Sea.
Tonight's sky in Southend-on-Sea
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 Southend-on-Sea
From Southend-on-Sea this is a partial eclipse — about 91% of the Sun is covered at maximum, around 19:13 local time. Partial phases begin ~18:17 and end ~20:05.
⚠︎ Never look at the partial phase without certified solar-eclipse glasses.
Full 2026 eclipse guide →Upcoming sky events from Southend-on-Sea
Stargazing in Southend-on-Sea — FAQ
Is tonight good for stargazing in Southend-on-Sea?
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 Southend-on-Sea tonight?
Tonight you can spot Venus, Mars, Saturn above the horizon from Southend-on-Sea, conditions permitting.
When is the best night to stargaze in Southend-on-Sea soon?
The darkest upcoming night is around Mon 13 Jul, when the Moon is only 0% lit.
Times are local to Southend-on-Sea (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.