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FindItInSpace
Your sky tonight ·New York, NY

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Night vision
← TONIGHTNew York · Fri, Jul 3

OBJECT GUIDE

Saturn tonight

The showstopper — its rings turn a first telescope look into a lifelong memory.

GREAT NIGHTBest 5:10 AM
See Saturn's full night in New York →

Saturn tonight looks like a steady golden “star” to the naked eye — bright, but easy to walk past without knowing what it is. The magic is in a telescope: at around 50× magnification the rings pop into view, which is why Saturn is the most famous first-telescope target in all of astronomy.

Evergreen guide · live figures below are computed for tonight

Tonight at a glance

from New York — every figure recomputes per city

Good night to look: skies look clear and it sits high enough for a clean view.

rises
12:48 AM
at its best
5:10 AM
sets
1:20 PM
brightness
mag +0.6

Pick your city for your own numbers, or open the full New York guide.

WHERE TO LOOK

Look Southeast

From New York tonight it rises at 12:48 AM and reaches 45° above the horizon at its best.

Naked eye

Find the golden star

Saturn looks like a bright, steady, golden-hued star that doesn’t twinkle. It moves slowly, staying in the same region of sky for a whole season.

Binoculars

Almost — but not quite

High-power binoculars hint that Saturn is elongated rather than round, but they cannot cleanly split the rings from the planet.

Telescope

The famous first look

Nearly any telescope at 50× and up shows the rings — the classic gasp-out-loud moment. Look for Titan too, a point of light a few ring-widths away.

KID TIP

In a small telescope the rings look like tiny “ears” — which is exactly what Galileo thought he saw 400 years ago.

Why look at Saturn

The rings

The most famous first-telescope view in astronomy — and it never gets old.

Easy once it’s up

A steady golden “star” bright enough for any city sky.

Titan tags along

Its largest moon shows as a nearby point of light in small scopes.

Quick facts

km wide
120,536
year orbit
29.4
km ring span
~270k

Common questions

Can I see Saturn’s rings without a telescope?

No — to naked eyes and binoculars Saturn is a bright golden point. The rings need a telescope at roughly 50× magnification or more, but almost any telescope, including beginner models, clears that bar easily.

How do I find Saturn in the sky?

Look for a bright, steady, golden “star” that doesn’t twinkle, along the same band of sky the Moon travels. The tonight pages compute exactly where and when to look from your city.

Why do Saturn’s rings look different from year to year?

Saturn is tilted, so over its 29-year orbit we view the rings from changing angles — sometimes wide open and dramatic, sometimes nearly edge-on and almost invisible. The cycle is slow, and the view shifts noticeably across a few years.

Is Saturn a good target for kids?

The best there is. A first look at the rings is the moment that hooks many people on astronomy for life — it looks unreal, like a sticker on the eyepiece, and kids remember it.

See Saturn from your city

Exact rise and set times, tonight's cloud forecast, and a plain-English viewing verdict — computed for each city, every night.

What else is up tonight

All objects →