TONIGHT IN TULSA, OK · FRIDAY, JULY 10 · SUNSET 8:43 PM
Up before dawn — the Moon's a small-hours sight tonight.
Only really up after midnight — highest around 6:03 AM.
Tonight's sky in Tulsa favors early risers: the waning crescent Moon, 13% lit, is only really up in the small hours, highest around 6:03 AM, under 45% forecast cloud cover. Venus, Jupiter and more are also up tonight. Every time and percentage here is computed for Tulsa's exact coordinates and tonight's forecast.
See the Moon’s full night →WANING CRESCENT · 13% LIT · SETS 5:12 PM
best window · waning crescent, 13% lit
Only really up in the small hours tonight — the Moon is highest around 6:03 AM, past a family-friendly bedtime. Worth a look if you're already awake.
- Partly cloudy (45%)
- Well-placed (33° up)
- Best after twilight ends
- Altitude33° · Mid sky
- Moon phase13% lit · waning crescent
- Cloud cover45% · Partly cloudy
- Sky darknessBortle 8 · City sky
What else is up tonight
The nights ahead
≈ marks a lower-confidence forecast — check back closer to the night.
Common questions
When exactly should I look tonight?
Tonight the Moon is only really up in the small hours — it climbs highest around 6:03 AM local time, 13% lit with 45% cloud cover forecast at that hour.
What else is visible tonight from Tulsa?
Beyond the Moon: Venus (best 8:43 PM · 28° up in the W), Jupiter (best 9:13 PM · 3° up in the WNW), Saturn (best 5:23 AM · 50° up in the SE), Mars (best 5:03 AM · 18° up in the ENE). Times and directions are computed for Tulsa, OK.
Do I need a telescope for tonight's sky?
No. The Moon, the bright planets and ISS passes are all naked-eye objects. Binoculars or a small telescope add detail but are never required.
Will clouds get in the way tonight in Tulsa?
Forecast says 45% cloud cover at the Moon's best time (15% average across the night). Look for gaps — objects reappear the moment the cloud breaks.
How dark is Tulsa's night sky?
Tulsa's city-center sky rates about Bortle 8 of 9 (city sky). 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.
How is the verdict calculated?
It fuses computed astronomy (altitude, phase, darkness) with the hour-by-hour cloud forecast for your exact location, weighted so overcast skies can never score a Good.