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Your sky tonight ·Tulsa, OK

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← TONIGHTTulsa, OK · Fri, Jul 3

Best time to see the Moon in Tulsa tonight

The best time to see the Moon in Tulsa tonight is around 4:44 AM local time, when the waning gibbous Moon, 83% lit, climbs to 42° above the horizon. It rises at 11:15 PM, and with 77% cloud cover in the forecast, viewing conditions look poor tonight.

Tulsa, OK · Friday, July 3 · look south

SKIP THIS ONEBest 3:59 – 5:29 AM

best window · waning gibbous, 83% lit

Better to wait: it is mostly cloudy and it sits high enough for a clean view.

  • Mostly cloudy (77%)
  • Well-placed (42° up)
  • Best after twilight ends
  • Altitude
    42° · Mid sky
  • Moon phase
    83% lit · waning gibbous
  • Cloud cover
    77% · Overcast
  • Sky darkness
    Bortle 8 · City sky
RISES
11:15 PM
HIGHEST
42°
SETS
10:30 AM
40°20°highest 4:49 AM · 42° upBEST 3:59 – 5:29 AMrose 11:15 PM · ESEsets 10:30 AM · WSWthe Moon’s whole day, rise to set — the warm stretch is your window
ILLUMINATED
83%
AGE
18.6 days
BRIGHTNESS
mag −11.5
APPARENT SIZE
30′
CLOUD COVER
77%
WHERE TO LOOK

Look South

It rises at 11:15 PM and reaches 42° above the horizon at its best.

Naked eye

Just look up

Face south after dark. The Moon is unmissable — watch the terminator (the line between light and shadow), where crater shadows are sharpest.

Binoculars

Grab binoculars

Steady 10×50 binoculars reveal the dark maria (the “seas”) and bright crater rays splashing across the surface.

Telescope

Any telescope shines

Even a small scope shows craters in 3-D relief along the terminator. Try 50–100× and trace the shadow line.

WHAT TO LOOK FOR

Aim along the terminator — the line where lunar night meets day. The sun sits low there, casting long shadows that make craters stand out in sharp relief. Near the bright limb, look for brilliant rays splashing out of the younger craters.

KID TIP

Ask your kid to find the “rabbit” or a friendly face hiding in the Moon's dark patches.

SKY DARKNESS

Bortle 8
Pristine darkInner city

Bright city sky — expect the Moon, planets, and the brightest stars; faint objects need a trip out of town. The Moon, planets and the ISS shine right through city glow.

WATCHING WITH

What are you watching with?

Common questions

Where exactly should I look?

Face south and look about halfway up. The Moon reaches 42° altitude around 4:44 AM from Tulsa, OK.

What's the exact best time?

4:44 AM local time tonight, when the Moon stands highest in a dark sky. It is up from 11:15 PM until it sets at 10:30 AM.

Do I need a telescope?

No — at 83% lit the Moon is a stunning naked-eye sight. Binoculars reveal the dark “seas,” and any small telescope shows craters in dramatic relief along the shadow line.

Will clouds get in the way?

Forecast says 77% cloud cover at the 4:44 AM viewing time (91% average across the night). Tonight looks mostly blocked; the next clear night will be far better.

How bright is the Moon tonight?

Tonight's Moon is a waning gibbous at 83% illumination — bright enough to outshine city lights and cast shadows.

When is the best night to see the Moon this week in Tulsa?

Monday: 5% cloud forecast at its best time and the 62%-lit Moon climbs to 58°. That's the pick across the next 7 nights from Tulsa, though forecasts that far out can shift.

ALSO UP TONIGHT

SAME VIEW, NEARBY