Ολική ηλιακή έκλειψη · 12 Αυγούστου 2026
Πού να παρακολουθήσετε την ολική ηλιακή έκλειψη του 2026 στην Κανταβρία
Yes — Cantabria sits squarely inside the 12 August 2026 path of totality. The total phase reaches the Santander coast at around 20:27 CEST and lasts roughly a minute, lengthening to about 1m 43s inland in the Picos de Europa.
In the path of totalityCantabria is fully inside the 12 August 2026 path of totality. The Moon's shadow makes landfall on the Bay of Biscay coast and sweeps across the whole region, so Santander, Santillana del Mar, Laredo and the Picos de Europa all see a genuine total eclipse — not a deep partial.
Santander reaches eclipse magnitude 1.0386, confirming totality. Because the region lies in the northern half of the path, durations are short on the coast — about a minute — and lengthen as you move south toward the central line. The deepest totality in Cantabria, 1m 43s, falls inland at Pico de la Tabla in the Picos de Europa. Wherever you stand, the eclipse happens with the Sun very low in the west-north-west, only about 9° above the horizon and roughly an hour before sunset, so an open western view is essential.
The timeline
When the eclipse happens
The partial phase begins around 19:31 CEST. Totality reaches the Santander coast at about 20:27 CEST (beginning ~20:26:51, maximum ~20:27:28) and lasts roughly 1m 5s there. The Sun sets at about 21:27 CEST, so the whole event unfolds with the Sun low in the WNW.
Where to set up
The best places to watch
Santander — Cabo Mayor & the Bay of Biscay
~1m 5sThe regional capital is fully in totality, with about 1m 5s of darkness and maximum near 20:27 CEST. Head to the Cabo Mayor lighthouse or the western-facing beaches such as El Sardinero and El Camello for an unobstructed view of the low Sun over the bay. Expect a party atmosphere and the region's highest cloud risk, so always have a fallback location ready inland or on high ground.
Picos de Europa — Pico de la Tabla / Fuente De
~1m 43sThis is the best duration in the region: Pico de la Tabla, near Sotres, sees totality of 1m 43s, framed by the rugged peaks. The Fuente De cable car lifts you roughly 800m above the valley to a viewing plateau that can rise above the coastal low cloud — the strongest weather hedge in Cantabria. Note that the high western horizon can clip the very low Sun, so pick an open plateau with a clear line to the WNW.
Santillana del Mar & the Oyambre coast
~58sOne of Spain's best-preserved medieval towns sits fully inside totality at about 58s, around 20:26 CEST. Pair the historic cobbled streets with the nearby Comillas and Oyambre coast, where Playa de Oyambre offers open western horizons over the sea for the low Sun. The town itself has limited sightlines, so move to the coast for the total phase.
Laredo — Playa de La Salve
~50sEastern Cantabria's great beach town has La Salve, a long west and north-west-facing strand that is ideal for a low-Sun eclipse. Totality is short here, about 50s (roughly 20:27:06–20:27:56 CEST), because the town lies toward the northern edge of the path, so keep the western horizon clear of headlands. The wide open beach makes it easy to spread out and find a clean sightline.
For local planning use Turismo de Cantabria (turismodecantabria.com), the national Spain.info eclipse hub (spain.info/en/eclipses), and the Picos de Europa National Park pages (miteco.gob.es) for access, parking and any event arrangements at mountain sites.
The weather call
Will the sky be clear?
Coastal Cantabria is the cloudiest stretch of the entire Spanish track. Satellite cloud amounts along the Bay of Biscay run close to 60% in mid-August, and eclipsophile rates the north coast as one of the least promising sections of the route, with historical 12 August skies clear only about half the time.
The marine layer is the real threat: low stratus and sea fog can sit over the coast on summer evenings even when the day has been bright. With the Sun only 9° up, any band of cloud sitting on the western horizon can hide the total phase entirely.
The good news is that the Cordillera Cantabrica abruptly blocks Atlantic moisture, so prospects improve sharply just a short distance inland and, above all, above the low cloud at mountain viewpoints.
Plan a mobile strategy. Watch the forecast in the days before, and be ready to move south or up to high ground — for example the Fuente De cable-car plateau or other Picos viewpoints — if the marine layer rolls in. A flexible plan and a full tank of fuel are worth more here than any single fixed location.
Plan the day
Your eclipse-day checklist
- CE-certified (ISO 12312-2) eclipse glasses for the whole partial phase
- An open western to north-western horizon — the Sun is only 9° up
- A fallback location inland or on high ground in case of coastal cloud
- Arrive early: coastal car parks and the Fuente De cable car fill up
- Check the cloud and marine-layer forecast in the final 48 hours
- A hill, headland or beach with no buildings or trees to the WNW
- Warm layers and a torch — light drops fast as the Sun nears the horizon
- Remove eclipse glasses only during totality, then refit them the instant the Sun reappears
⚠ Never look without certified glasses
Every second of the partial phase is unsafe to view unprotected — only during totality itself is it safe to look unaided. Ordinary sunglasses do nothing.
Quick answers
Cantabria eclipse FAQ
Is Cantabria in the path of totality for the 2026 solar eclipse?
What time is the total solar eclipse in Santander and Cantabria?
How long does totality last in Cantabria?
Where is the best place to watch the eclipse in Cantabria?
Do I need eclipse glasses to watch the eclipse in Cantabria?
Will it be cloudy in Cantabria for the 2026 eclipse?
Keep exploring the path
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Read the guide →Πηγές: timeanddate.com · nationaleclipse.com · eclipsophile.com (καιρός) · Gobierno de Aragón · BBC Sky at Night. Οι ώρες είναι τοπικές (CEST).