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← AUG 12 ECLIPSEAnchorage, AK · Wed, Aug 12, 2026

SOLAR ECLIPSE · WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 12, 2026

Yes. 27.9% of the Sun will be covered from Anchorage.

The August 12, 2026 partial solar eclipse in Anchorage begins at 7:36 AM, reaches its maximum at 8:21 AM when 27.9% of the Sun is covered, and ends at 9:09 AM AKDT. The Sun stands 15.1° high in the east at maximum, so you need certified eclipse glasses for every minute of it.

BEGINS
7:36 AM
MAXIMUM
8:21 AM
ENDS
9:09 AM
SUN AT MAX
15.1° · E
CLOUD COVER
~July 27

EYE SAFETY: READ BEFORE YOU LOOK

A partial eclipse is never safe to look at unprotected

  • Never look at the partially eclipsed Sun with bare eyes.Sunglasses are not protection, not even several pairs stacked, no matter how dark.
  • Use ISO 12312-2 certified eclipse glasses or a handheld solar viewer, checked for scratches or damage before every use.
  • Never point a camera, telescope, or binoculars at the Sun while wearing eclipse glasses: concentrated sunlight destroys the filter and your eyes. Optics need their own solar filter mounted on the front of the instrument.
  • No glasses? Pinhole projection is the safe indirect method: cross your fingers into a waffle and watch the crescent Suns on the ground, even the gaps between tree leaves act as natural pinholes.

Source:NASA's eclipse eye-safety guidance.

SAME NIGHT

Make it a double feature

Maximum eclipse is 8:21 AM; after dark that same night, the Perseid meteor shower (the year's best) peaks over Anchorage under a moonless sky.

Perseids over Anchorage that night →

Common questions

Where should I look?

Face east (E): the Sun stands 15.1° above the horizon at maximum eclipse, at 8:21 AM local time. Never look at it without ISO 12312-2 eclipse glasses; ordinary sunglasses are not protection, no matter how dark.

What time exactly is the eclipse in Anchorage?

First contact is at 7:36 AM, maximum eclipse at 8:21 AM, and last contact at 9:09 AM local time on Wednesday, August 12, 2026, 94 minutes from start to finish.

Do I need eclipse glasses?

Yes. For every second of it. Even at maximum, 72.1% of the Sun's surface is still blazing over Anchorage, far more than enough to damage your eyes. Use ISO 12312-2 certified eclipse glasses or a handheld solar viewer.

Will clouds block it?

Hourly cloud forecasts reach only about 16 days out, so Anchorage's August 12 forecast opens around July 27. This page picks it up automatically the moment it exists; check back then.