Peñíscola castle on its sea promontory at dusk, Valencia & Castellón — total solar eclipse, 12 August 2026

Eclipse solar total · 12 de agosto de 2026

Dónde ver el eclipse solar total de 2026 en Valencia y Castellón

Yes — Castellón de la Plana, Peñíscola, Sagunto and the city of València all sit inside the path of totality on 12 August 2026. Totality falls around 20:31 CEST and lasts from roughly 1 minute 39 seconds near Peñíscola down to about a minute on València's southern edge, with the eclipsed Sun only about 4° above the sea.

In the path of totality
Totality begins20:31 CEST20:30 at Peñíscola and 20:33 at València city; times vary by a few minutes along the coast.
DurationAbout 1m 34s at Castellón de la PlanaRanges from ~1m 39s at Peñíscola (nearest the centreline) down to ~1m 00s at València city on the southern edge.
Sun altitude~4°low in the west, near sunset
Coverage100% (total)Total within the band; magnitude just above 1.00 at the southern edge near València.
Clear-sky odds Good · ≈72%Mid-August is one of the drier, sunnier windows here — clear-sky odds around 80% near Peñíscola — but a low western cloud bank can still hide a Sun only ~4° up.
Counting down to totality
days hrs min sec

The Valencia and Castellón coast is the last stretch of mainland Spain to fall under the Moon's shadow before it slips out to the Balearic Sea.

Both Castellón de la Plana and the city of València sit genuinely inside the path of totality — confirmed by Spain's Instituto Geográfico Nacional, which lists Castellón and Valencia among the provincial capitals that see a true total eclipse. Peñíscola, farther north, lies closest to the centreline and gets the longest darkness of the four. This is the rare Mediterranean case where totality meets the sea at sunset: the eclipsed Sun drops into the water in the west-north-west, so the make-or-break factor is not whether you are in the band (you are) but whether your western horizon is completely clear.

The timeline

When the eclipse happens

~19:37–19:38 CESTPartial begins — first "bite" out of the Sun
20:31 CESTTotality — About 1m 34s at Castellón de la Plana. Glasses off only if total.
~20:56 CEST (València)Sun sets with the partial phase still in progress

The partial phase begins around 19:37–19:38 CEST. Totality arrives near 20:31 CEST — about 20:30 at Peñíscola, 20:31 at Castellón de la Plana and 20:33 at València city. The Sun then sets at roughly 20:56 CEST in València, so the partial phase is still finishing as the Sun touches the horizon. Be set up and looking west-north-west well before 20:25.

Where to set up

The best places to watch

Peñíscola — Playa Norte / Nuevo Parking Disuasorio

~1m 39s

Official municipal site: Nuevo Parking Disuasorio, near Playa Norte; open sea horizon

The longest totality of the four — about 1 minute 39 seconds — and the most photogenic backdrop, with the eclipsed Sun sinking beside the silhouette of the 13th-century Templar castle on its sea promontory. The town council has set up its official observation point at the new park-and-ride near Playa Norte, which gives a wide, open sea horizon to the west-north-west. Arrive early and book accommodation well ahead: this is the marquee spot on the Castellón coast and it will be busy.

Castellón de la Plana — Playa del Pinar & Planetario (El Grao)

~1m 34s

Playa del Pinar / Planetario de Castelló, El Grao — public observation planned

About 1 minute 34 seconds of totality with a flat, sea-facing western horizon. The Planetario de Castelló sits right on the coastal park beside Playa del Pinar in El Grao, and the city is organising a large public observation on the beach. The wide sands and the litoral park give plenty of room to spread out and an unobstructed line to where the Sun sets over the Mediterranean — a strong, easy-access choice if you want the organised-event atmosphere.

Sagunto — Playa del Puerto de Sagunto

~1m 00s

Open coastal beach; less crowded than València, in the totality band

Mid-way between Castellón and València and firmly inside the band, with roughly a minute of totality. The long, straight beach at Puerto de Sagunto faces east over the water but has open, low ground to the west-north-west, and it is an easy, uncrowded alternative to the València city beaches. As everywhere on this coast, scout your exact sight-line in advance so no buildings or trees block the last few degrees of sky.

València — Platja de la Malva-rosa (official observation point)

~1m 00s

Official city observation point; parking + accessibility; very brief totality (south edge)

València is the only major Mediterranean coastal city where the Moon fully covers the Sun, but it sits on the southern edge of the path, so totality is brief — about a minute — and the Sun is only about 4° up. The city has designated Malva-rosa beach as its official observation point, with parking and accessibility provision. Because the Sun sets at around 20:56 before the partial phase fully ends, a clean western horizon is absolutely critical here; the wide beachfront and the marina and harbour breakwaters give the best open sight-lines.

Peñíscola, Castellón de la Plana and València are each running official observation points (Peñíscola's at the new park-and-ride near Playa Norte; València's on Malva-rosa beach). Check the municipal sites and the IGN's eclipse pages for the latest local guidance before you travel.

The weather call

Will the sky be clear?

Mid-August on the Valencian and Castellón coast is one of the drier, sunnier windows of the year. Local forecasts cite clear-sky odds of around 80% near Peñíscola, which is why the Castellón coast is a confident totality target rather than a gamble.

The main risk is afternoon-into-evening convective cloud fed by marine moisture along the coastal plain. Eclipsophile's TSE2026 climatology puts cloud amounts in the neighbouring Iberian System ranges around 35–45%, so cloud building inland through the day is the thing to watch on the forecasts.

The decisive factor here is the low Sun. Totality happens with the Sun only about 4° above the horizon, so even a thin bank of coastal haze or a single low cloud sitting on the western horizon can swallow the event entirely.

That makes site choice more important than the regional average. An elevated spot or an open, sea-facing beach with a clean line to the west-north-west is worth real effort. Check the satellite and webcams on the day, and be ready to move along the coast if the western sky looks blocked where you are.

Plan the day

Your eclipse-day checklist

  • CE-certified ISO 12312-2 eclipse glasses for everyone — needed for the long partial phase
  • A spot with a completely clear west-north-west horizon over the sea
  • Arrive early: Peñíscola and the official beaches will fill, and parking is limited
  • Book accommodation well ahead — this is a marquee stretch of the coast
  • Glasses come off only during totality, then straight back on as the Sun reappears
  • Check the satellite, webcams and forecast on the day; be ready to move for a clear horizon
  • Note your local totality time (≈20:30–20:33) and be set up by 20:25
  • Never look through binoculars, a camera or a phone at the partial Sun without a certified solar filter

⚠ 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.

Shop ISO 12312-2 eclipse glasses →

Quick answers

Valencia & Castellón eclipse FAQ

Will the eclipse be total in Valencia and Castellón?
Yes. Spain's Instituto Geográfico Nacional confirms that both Castellón and Valencia are among the provincial capitals inside the path of totality on 12 August 2026. Peñíscola, Castellón de la Plana, Sagunto and the city of València all see a genuine total eclipse — though València sits on the southern edge of the band, so its totality is the shortest.
What time is totality in Valencia and Castellón?
Totality falls at around 20:31 CEST, with small differences along the coast — roughly 20:30 at Peñíscola, 20:31 at Castellón de la Plana and 20:33 at València city. The partial phase begins earlier, at about 19:37–19:38 CEST, so be set up and looking west-north-west well before 20:25.
How long does totality last on this coast?
It depends on how close you are to the centreline. Peñíscola gets the longest darkness at about 1 minute 39 seconds, Castellón de la Plana around 1 minute 34 seconds, and València city only about a minute because it lies on the southern edge of the path.
Where is the best place to watch in Valencia and Castellón?
Peñíscola (Playa Norte, near the official park-and-ride) offers the longest totality and the castle-and-sea backdrop. Castellón de la Plana's Playa del Pinar, beside the Planetario in El Grao, hosts a large public observation. València's Malva-rosa is the official city point. Wherever you go, the priority is a completely clear west-north-west horizon over the sea, because the Sun is very low.
Do I need eclipse glasses to watch safely?
Yes. You must wear CE-certified, ISO 12312-2 eclipse glasses throughout the long partial phase. You can remove them only during the brief total phase, then put them straight back on as the Sun begins to reappear. Never look at the partial Sun through binoculars, a camera or a phone without a proper certified solar filter.
Will it be cloudy for the eclipse?
Mid-August is one of the drier, sunnier windows on this coast, with clear-sky odds around 80% near Peñíscola. The main risk is evening convective cloud fed by marine moisture, and because the Sun is only about 4° up, even a low bank of haze on the western horizon can hide totality. An elevated spot or an open, sea-facing beach gives you the best chance.

Keep exploring the path

Nearby regions to watch from

Fuentes: timeanddate.com · nationaleclipse.com · eclipsophile.com (tiempo) · Gobierno de Aragón · BBC Sky at Night. Los horarios son locales (CEST).