41 éclipses solaires — 13 passées, 28 à venir.
A solar eclipse occurs when the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun, casting a shadow on our planet. Because the Moon's apparent size almost perfectly matches the Sun's, the alignment produces three distinct spectacles: a total eclipse plunges a narrow corridor into sudden darkness; an annular eclipse leaves a brilliant "ring of fire" when the Moon is slightly too far away to cover the Sun completely; and a rare hybrid eclipse shifts between total and annular along its path.
Between 2001 and 2100, Earth will experience 142 solar eclipses — 67 total, 68 annular, and 7 hybrid. On average, any given location on Earth experiences a total solar eclipse roughly once every 375 years, making each one a rare opportunity worth planning for. The next total eclipse visible from Europe is 12 August 2026, with a path of totality crossing Morocco, Spain, and the Arctic.
This archive covers every eclipse with precise contact times for hundreds of cities, an interactive path-of-totality map, maximum occultation by country, and a simulated view of the sky at peak eclipse. Use the upcoming grid below to plan your next eclipse chase, or browse the archive to explore historical events.
28 éclipses restantes ce siècle. Cliquez sur une carte pour voir le trajet complet, les horaires et la simulation du ciel.
Les lunettes de soleil ordinaires et les écrans de téléphone ne bloquent pas suffisamment le rayonnement solaire. Utilisez des lunettes d'éclipse certifiées ISO 12312-2 en permanence — sauf pendant les brefs instants de totalité. Des dommages oculaires permanents peuvent survenir en quelques secondes.
Observation Sûre →13 éclipses depuis 2001, la plus récente le February 17, 2026.