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PartialNorth Holland, Netherlands

Amsterdam Solar Eclipse — August 12, 2026

From Amsterdam, Netherlands, the August 12, 2026 partial solar eclipse covers up to 88.2% of the Sun, peaking at 20:10 local time (UTC+2) with the Sun 7.9° above the west horizon.

Never look at the partial phases without certified ISO 12312-2 solar viewers or eclipse glasses. Ordinary sunglasses are not safe. Read the eye-safety guide.

Eclipse at a glance

TypePartial
Max obscuration88.2%
Magnitude0.900
Maximum (local)20:10 UTC+2
Maximum (UTC)18:10:56
Sun altitude7.9°
Sun directionwest (284.1°)

What you’ll see in Amsterdam

You’ll see a partial eclipse — the Moon covers part of the Sun but never all of it, so the sky stays bright and day-like. At maximum, about 88.2% of the Sun is hidden. Certified solar eye protection (ISO 12312-2) is required for the entire eclipse.

Open the interactive map at Amsterdam →

Eclipse timeline for Amsterdam

EventLocal (UTC+2)UTCWhat happens
First contact (C1)19:1617:16:06Partial eclipse begins
Maximum20:1018:10:56Greatest eclipse
Fourth contact (C4)21:0319:03:00Partial eclipse ends

Times computed from NASA/GSFC Besselian elements (Espenak) for 52.3676°, 4.9041°. Local times use the Europe/Amsterdam time zone.

Frequently asked questions

Is Amsterdam in the path of totality?
No. Amsterdam sees a partial solar eclipse on Wednesday, August 12, 2026, with up to 88.2% of the Sun covered at maximum (20:10 UTC+2). The nearest totality is to the north.
What time is the eclipse in Amsterdam?
Greatest eclipse is at 20:10 local time (UTC+2). The partial phase runs from first contact until last contact, roughly an hour on either side of maximum.
Do I need eye protection?
Yes. Certified ISO 12312-2 solar viewers are required whenever any part of the Sun’s bright disc is visible. A partial eclipse is never safe to view without protection.

Nearby cities

See all cities & times →