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World of Software > News > Longest solar eclipse in 100 years to happen in 2027 – here’s where to see it
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Longest solar eclipse in 100 years to happen in 2027 – here’s where to see it

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Last updated: 2025/07/21 at 9:15 AM
News Room Published 21 July 2025
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The moon passes in front of the sun during a solar eclipse in Ohio last year (Picture: Getty Images North America)

If there’s one thing that the Earth, Moon and Sun have in common, it’s that they love to get their groove on.

The three celestial bodies are forever dancing around the cosmos and, every now and then, they line up perfectly, creating an eclipse.

A solar eclipse is when the Moon slides between us and the Sun, casting a shadow of wonder as only the wispy, outer edges of the Sun are visible.

Eclipses can remind us all of our place in the lonely, messy cosmos – after all, they only happen because the Moon is 400 times smaller than the Sun, but is 400 times closer to us.

They tend to last 10 seconds or so, but in only a couple of years, one of the longest and most significant eclipses of the 21st century will happen.

When is the solar eclipse 2027?

The solar eclipse will take place on August 2, 2027, in 10 countries.

TOPSHOT - The total solar eclipse Monday August 21, 2017 in Madras, Oregon. Emotional sky-gazers stood transfixed across North America Monday as the Sun vanished behind the Moon in a rare total eclipse that swept the continent coast-to-coast for the first time in nearly a century. (Photo by ROB KERR / AFP) (Photo by ROB KERR/AFP via Getty Images)
Total solar eclipses only happen once every 18 months or so (Picture: AFP)

This one will be a total solar eclipse, when the Sun fully disappears behind the Moon. The moment this happens is called totality.

A line of totality will then slowly drift across the world, where for a few brief minutes the Moon will fully block out the Sun, and darkness will swallow the light of day.

A halo will glow white behind the Moon, the Sun’s corona.

Where can you see the 2027 total solar eclipse?

  • Spain
  • Morocco
  • Algeria
  • Tunisia
  • Libya
  • Egypt
  • Sudan
  • Saudi Arabia
  • Yemen
  • Somalia

How long will the solar eclipse 2027 be?

Six minutes, which in the world of cosmic coincidences, is a seriously long time.

But how long stargazers will have to crane their necks will depend on where they live.

The total solar eclipse will only be visible across a thin, 160-mile-long strip of southern Europe and northern Africa where 89 million live, according to Timeanddate.com.

TOPSHOT - This combination of pictures shows different stages of the solar eclipse as seen from Easter Island in the Pacific Ocean, Chile, on October 2, 2024. (Photo by JONATHAN MARTINS / AFP) (Photo by JONATHAN MARTINS/AFP via Getty Images)
Solar eclipses have many different stages, and which one you see depends on where you live (Picture: AFP)

The skies will begin to darken above the Atlantic Ocean at 6.19am (BST), just as the Sun is rising.

While this is where totality begins, it’s not where it will be the longest. As the two cosmic giants do their dance and the Earth spins, totality will only be visible above the Atlantic for three minutes.

The Moon’s 258km-wide shadow will then be cast in the aptly-named Costa de la Luz, or ‘Coast of the Light’, in Spain’s Andalusia before gobbling up the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar.

It will also envelop Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya and Egypt, where it will reach its deepest, longest duration at 6 minutes and 22 seconds from 1.44pm (GMT).

This will be the longest eclipse visible from land between 1991 and 2114, making it a once-in-a-lifetime event.

How to watch a solar eclipse

For one, please don’t stare directly at the Sun, which can permanently damage your eyes.

Even if the Moon has completely obscured the Sun, the risk is still high. People can look at the celestial event using eclipse glasses.

You can also project the eclipse onto the ground using items around the house, such as a cardboard box, a kitchen strainer or even your fingers.

After it leaves Egypt, the total eclipse will be around four to three minutes as the shadow glides through the Red Sea, Saudi Arabia and Yemen.

The eclipse will end with a totally eclipsed sunset near the Chagos Archipelago in the Indian Ocean.

Some nations just to the north or south of the totality line will be able to see a partial solar eclipse, when the Moon takes a smaller bite out of the Sun.

This is the case in the UK, where up to 30% of the Sun will be hidden by the Moon from just before 10am (BST), for about two hours.

Is there a solar eclipse on August 2, 2025?

Skywatchers have been claiming online that the world will be plunged into darkness for six minutes on August 2 this year.

But this isn’t the case, according to astronomical data. It seems users have simply got the year of the eclipse wrong.

BRADY, TEXAS - APRIL 08: The moon begins its descent below the sun's horizon during a total solar eclipse on April 08, 2024 in Brady, Texas. Millions of people have flocked to areas across North America that are in the "path of totality" in order to experience the eclipse today. During the event, the moon will pass in between the Sun and the Earth, appearing to block the Sun. (Photo by Brandon Bell/Getty Images)
Getty Images North America

When is the next solar eclipse?

Nasa says the next eclipse, a partial one, will happen on September 21, blanketing Australia, Antarctica and the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans.

The soonest total eclipse will be August 12, 2026. It will only be visible in a sliver of Greenland, Iceland, Spain and Russia, while Europe, Africa and North America will be treated with a partial solar eclipse.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at [email protected].

For more stories like this, check our news page.

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