OBJECT GUIDE
Jupiter tonight
The giant of the solar system — bright, bold, and four moons visible in any binoculars.
Jupiter tonight is usually the brightest star-like object after Venus — a bold, cream-white beacon that stays up for months at a stretch each year. Steady 10×50 binoculars reveal up to four Galilean moons strung in a line beside it, and even a small telescope adds the planet’s two dark cloud belts.
Evergreen guide · live figures below are computed for tonight
Tonight at a glance
from New York — every figure recomputes per cityDoable, but not ideal: skies look clear and it sits low in the sky.
Pick your city for your own numbers, or open the full New York guide.
Look West-northwest
From New York tonight it rises at 7:01 AM and reaches 11° above the horizon at its best.
Spot the beacon
Jupiter shines steady cream-white and usually outshines every star in the sky. If a brilliant “star” doesn’t twinkle, you’ve probably found it.
Count the moons
Brace your elbows or use a fence: steady 10×50 binoculars show up to four Galilean moons as tiny points in a line. Their positions change every night.
Belts and the Spot
A small scope at 80–150× shows the two dark equatorial cloud belts; on steady nights larger scopes can pick out the Great Red Spot as it rotates into view.
Through binoculars, have your kid count Jupiter’s moons — up to four, and they shuffle places every single night.
Why look at Jupiter
Four moons in binoculars
Any steady 10×50 shows the Galilean moons reshuffling from night to night.
Bright for months
When Jupiter is up, it dominates the evening sky for a whole season.
Detail in small scopes
Cloud belts show at low power; the Great Red Spot appears on good nights.
Quick facts
Common questions
Can I really see Jupiter’s moons with binoculars?
Yes. Ordinary 10×50 binoculars, held steady, show up to four Galilean moons — Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto — as star-like points lined up beside the planet. Watch on consecutive nights and you’ll see them change places.
How do I tell Jupiter from a bright star?
Jupiter is brighter than any night-time star and shines with a steady, cream-white light instead of twinkling. It also sits near the ecliptic — the same band of sky the Moon and planets travel through.
What can a small telescope show on Jupiter?
Quite a lot: the four Galilean moons, the planet’s slightly flattened disk, and its two main dark cloud belts. Larger scopes on steady nights add more belts, and the Great Red Spot when it faces Earth.
See Jupiter from your city
Exact rise and set times, tonight's cloud forecast, and a plain-English viewing verdict — computed for each city, every night.