OBJECT GUIDE
The Moon tonight
Our nearest neighbour — and the perfect first thing to look up at, any night of the month.
88% lit · waning gibbous
The Moon tonight is the easiest object in the sky: bright enough to see from any city, no equipment needed. It rises about 50 minutes later each night and cycles through its phases every 29.5 days, so the view — crescent, quarter, gibbous or full — is genuinely different every single evening you look up.
Evergreen guide · live figures below are computed for tonight
Tonight at a glance
from New York — every figure recomputes per cityGood night to look: skies look clear and it sits high enough for a clean view.
Pick your city for your own numbers, or open the full New York guide.
Look South
From New York tonight it rises at 10:52 PM and reaches 37° above the horizon at its best.
Just look up
The Moon is unmissable once it clears the horizon — watch the terminator (the line between light and shadow), where crater shadows are sharpest.
Grab binoculars
Steady 10×50 binoculars reveal the dark maria (the “seas”) and bright crater rays splashing across the surface.
Any telescope shines
Even a small scope shows craters in 3-D relief along the terminator. Try 50–100× and trace the shadow line.
Ask your kid to find the “rabbit” or a friendly face hiding in the Moon’s dark patches.
Why look at the Moon
Impossible to miss
The brightest thing in the night sky — no app needed to find it.
No gear required
Stunning with bare eyes; even better through any binoculars or scope.
New view every night
Phases shift the shadows daily, so craters look different each time.
Quick facts
Phases this month
Common questions
Do I need a telescope to enjoy the Moon?
No. The Moon is a spectacular naked-eye object from anywhere, including bright city centers. Binoculars add the dark “seas” and bright crater rays; any small telescope shows craters in dramatic 3-D relief along the shadow line.
When in the month is the Moon best?
Around first quarter. It is conveniently up in the evening, and low sunlight along the terminator throws crater shadows into sharp relief. A full Moon is brilliant but front-lit, so it actually looks flatter through a telescope.
Why can I see the Moon in the daytime?
Because it is bright enough to punch through the blue sky, and it spends roughly half of every month above the horizon during daylight hours. A daytime Moon is completely normal — look for it near first and last quarter.
Does city light pollution ruin the Moon?
Barely at all. The Moon outshines urban skyglow by a huge margin, which makes it the single best object for city stargazers. Haze and cloud matter far more than streetlights do.
See the Moon from your city
Exact rise and set times, tonight's cloud forecast, and a plain-English viewing verdict — computed for each city, every night.