Ολική ηλιακή έκλειψη · 12 Αυγούστου 2026
Πού να παρακολουθήσετε την ολική ηλιακή έκλειψη του 2026 στη Ναβάρα
Southern Navarra is in the path of totality on 12 August 2026 — the Ribera del Ebro sees up to ~1m 27s of total eclipse. But Pamplona is just outside: it gets only a deep partial, so head south to the Ribera.
In the path of totalityOn 12 August 2026 the path of totality clips the southern half of Navarra — with an important catch for anyone in the capital. Pamplona itself is just outside the path: it sees a very deep partial, not totality. To stand in the Moon's shadow you need to be down in the Ribera del Ebro or the central Tafalla–Olite belt.
Below: the precise timeline, the strongest places to set up, an honest read on the weather, and a short field checklist so the day actually goes to plan.
The timeline
When the eclipse happens
At totality the Sun sits only ~6° above the western horizon, so a clean, flat view to the west is the single biggest thing separating a great spot from a ruined one. A low ridge, a tree line or a town skyline can quietly swallow the whole event.
Where to set up
The best places to watch
Tudela
~1m 20sThe region's main base for totality, with official viewing areas planned. Totality lasts about 1 minute 20 seconds with the Sun only ~6° above the horizon, so pick open ground or the riverbank where the western view is genuinely flat. Expect crowds, road management and full car parks — arrive well ahead of time.
Fitero
~1m 27sThe southern strip of Navarra gets the most totality, up to about 1 minute 27 seconds here at Fitero — the longest in the region. A quiet spa town in the far south-western corner; find an exposed spot with a clean, open horizon to the west, as the Sun sits only about 6° up at totality.
Bardenas Reales
~1m 25sThe semi-desert badlands near Tudela are a spectacular, wide-horizon setting for a low-Sun eclipse — exactly the flat, open western view you want when the Sun is only ~6° above the horizon. Note that access and parking will be tightly managed on the day, so plan your route and arrival carefully.
Corella
~1m 25sOne of the southern Ribera towns squarely inside the path, with around 1 minute 25 seconds of totality. A relaxed alternative to busy Tudela; head to the open farmland on the town's western edge so the low Sun stays clear of buildings and tree lines.
Cintruénigo
~1m 25sPart of the southern strip that gets the most totality — around 1 minute 25 seconds. Sitting close to Fitero and Corella, it makes a good fallback base if nearby towns fill up. Choose an exposed location with a genuinely flat western horizon for the low, 6°-altitude Sun.
Tudela is planning official viewing areas in the Ribera; access and parking in the Bardenas Reales will be tightly managed on the day, so plan your route early.
The weather call
Will the sky be clear?
Southern Navarra sits in the Ebro valley, which has some of the best clear-sky odds on the whole Spanish path — August cloud here frequently drops below 30%.
Combined with the wide, flat horizons of the Ribera and the Bardenas, it is a genuinely strong place to be for a low-Sun eclipse.
The one caveat: at just ~6° altitude, the Sun is shining through a lot of low atmosphere, so a band of haze or distant cloud on the horizon can interfere right at totality.
Pick an exposed spot with a genuinely open west, and keep half an eye on the forecast in the final 48 hours.
Plan the day
Your eclipse-day checklist
- Certified ISO 12312-2 / CE eclipse glasses — one pair per person, no exceptions.
- Scout a spot with a clear, flat western horizon — test it the evening before at the same time.
- Arrive 2–3 hours early. Expect road closures and full car parks near official sites.
- Water, sun cover and a hat — it's a Navarrese August afternoon before it cools at totality.
- A low, open foreground (the Ribera plain, the Bardenas badlands) makes the photo.
- For the partial phase, your camera or phone needs a solar filter — remove it only at totality.
- Don't spend totality fiddling with settings. You get under 90 seconds. Watch it.
- Glasses back on the instant the Sun's edge reappears — the diamond ring is the cue.
⚠ 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
Navarra eclipse FAQ
Is Pamplona in the path of totality?
Where in Navarra can I actually see totality?
What time is totality in southern Navarra?
What are the weather odds in southern Navarra?
Do I need eclipse glasses if I'm in Pamplona?
Keep exploring the path
Nearby regions to watch from
France
France sees a deep partial eclipse on 12 August 2026 — up to ~99% in the far south-west,...
Read the guide → ● TotalityIceland
Western Iceland gets a genuine total eclipse on 12 August 2026 — up to ~2m 13s on land,...
Read the guide → ● TotalityValencia & Castellón
Yes — Castellón de la Plana, Peñíscola, Sagunto and the city of València all sit inside the path...
Read the guide →Πηγές: timeanddate.com · nationaleclipse.com · eclipsophile.com (καιρός) · Gobierno de Aragón · BBC Sky at Night. Οι ώρες είναι τοπικές (CEST).