Gear

Best Solar Filter for a Camera: What Actually Works (and What's Dangerous)

ND filters are not solar filters — and the difference can cost you your camera and your eyes. Here's what a safe camera solar filter actually is, and how to fit one to any lens.

A DSLR on a tripod with a solar filter mounted on the front of the lens, aimed at the Sun in a clear daytime sky.
A DSLR on a tripod with a solar filter mounted on the front of the lens, aimed at the Sun in a clear daytime sky.

If you want to photograph the 2026 solar eclipse, the single most important piece of gear isn't your camera or your lens — it's the filter on the front of that lens. Get it wrong and you'll ruin your sensor in seconds and risk your eyesight through the viewfinder. Get it right and it costs about the same as a pizza.

The short version
What you need
A true solar filter (around OD 5) mounted on the front of the lens — not an ND filter, not a screw-in rear filter.
Why not ND
Even an ND1000 lets through dangerous infrared and isn't dark enough for the Sun. It can cook your sensor and your retina.
Cheapest safe option
A cut-to-fit solar filter sheet (OD 5.6, ISO 12312-2) — works on any lens diameter from one €11.85 sheet.
An ND filter is not a solar filter. A camera lens concentrates sunlight like a magnifying glass. Without a proper front-mounted solar filter you can destroy your sensor — and if you compose through an optical viewfinder, injure your eye — almost instantly.

ND filter vs. solar filter — the difference that matters

This is the mistake that wrecks cameras every eclipse. "I have an ND1000, that's 10 stops, surely that's enough?" No — and here's why:

  • Darkness. Photographing the Sun needs roughly OD 5 (about 16–17 stops / 1 part in 100,000). A "big stopper" ND1000 is OD 3.0 — a hundred times too bright.
  • Infrared. This is the dangerous part. Most ND filters block visible light but pass near-infrared. Your sensor and your eye still receive a focused IR beam you can't see. A true solar filter blocks UV, visible and IR.
  • Where it mounts. A solar filter must sit on the front of the lens so the Sun is filtered before it's focused. A rear/drop-in ND does nothing to protect the optics in front of it.
The one exception is totality — and only if you've planned it. The filter comes off for the corona only inside the path of totality, only while the Sun is 100% covered, and only if you already know your exact totality duration (check timeanddate.com and our eclipse data tool). The instant the Sun's edge returns, the filter goes back on. Not sure you're in the path? Filter stays on.

What a real camera solar filter is

Two formats dominate, and both rely on the same certified film:

  1. Ready-made threaded/cell filters — convenient, but priced per lens diameter and often €40–90 each. Buy the wrong thread size and it's useless.
  2. Solar filter sheet (film) you cut to fit — one flexible sheet of the same certified material, mounted in a simple DIY cell or cap. One sheet covers any lens diameter, and you can make filters for your binoculars or scope from the offcuts.

For most photographers shooting one or two lenses, the sheet is the better value and the more flexible choice.

Which way round? Our solar film is metallic-coated on one side. Mount it with the reflective, mirror-like side facing the Sun — it reflects most of the heat and light away before it ever reaches the film, your lens or your sensor.

Film vs. glass solar filters — an honest comparison

The two materials that actually block the Sun safely are polymer film and coated glass. Neither is "best" outright — they trade off. Here's the straight version:

Solar film (polymer) Glass filter
Price Low — one sheet fits any lens, from €11.85 High — €40–90, sized per thread
Sharpness Excellent (often sharper than glass) Very good
Sun colour Neutral white-ish (our film) — pleasant Varies; some cast orange
Durability Less rugged — inspect for pinholes before use More rugged, heavier
Fit Cut to ANY diameter; offcuts do binoculars/scope One fixed size only
Look Slightly wrinkled (harmless — doesn't affect the image) Optically flat

We'll be straight with you: film looks slightly wrinkled and you must inspect it for pinholes before every use (we show you how below). In exchange you get sharper images, a neutral Sun colour, and one affordable sheet that fits every lens you own. For most eclipse photographers that's the right trade — which is why film is what we make.

Absolute Eclipse Solar Filter Sheet with packaging.
Solar Filter Sheet — OD 5.6, ISO 12312-2

Cut-to-fit solar film for camera lenses, telescopes and binoculars. One sheet fits any diameter.

From €11.85 · 3 sizes Shop the solar filter sheet
The filter protects your camera — not your eyes. You still can't look at the Sun to compose or aim without certified eye protection. Reusable plastic eclipse glasses (or a clip-on for your prescription frames) are the photographer's pick — ISO 12312-2, made to last more than one eclipse.

How to fit a sheet filter to your lens

  1. Measure your lens outer diameter. Add 2–3 cm so the filter overlaps the barrel — you'll fold this over to grip.
  2. Build a simple cell. Two card rings (or a lens cap with the centre cut out) sandwich the film with no tension — slight wrinkles are fine and don't affect the image.
  3. Mount it on the front, metallic side out. The reflective, mirror-like side faces the Sun; the film must filter the Sun before the lens focuses it. Make sure it can't blow off in wind — tape or a friction fit all the way round.
  4. Inspect before every use. Hold it to a bright lamp. Any pinhole, scratch or crease that lets a spot of light through = bin that section and re-cut.
Three-step diagram: cut a circle from the solar film sheet, sandwich it between two card rings, then push the finished cell onto the front of the lens.
One sheet → a simple card cell → a front-fitting filter for any lens diameter (metallic side facing the Sun).

How dark should the image look, and what exposure?

Through a correct OD 5 solar filter the sky goes black and the Sun is a clean, sharp disc — you'll see sunspots on a clear day. The Sun's brightness stays constant through the partial phases, so once you've nailed the exposure you won't need to keep changing it.

A safe starting point for the partial phases (filter on): f/8–f/11, ISO 100, shutter around 1/500 s — then chimp the histogram and adjust. Almost any ISO works because the filtered Sun is still bright. Keep your focal length sensible: up to ~2000 mm on full-frame, ~1300 mm on a crop sensor, or the Sun spills out of frame. For the full settings walkthrough, see our camera-settings guide; new to this entirely? Start with how to photograph the Sun & a solar eclipse.

Mount the filter on the front of the lens — not the rear filter slot. Big telephotos with a drop-in rear holder still need the Sun filtered before it enters the lens. A rear filter protects nothing in front of it.
Diagram comparing a solar filter on the front of a lens (sunlight safely dimmed) versus at the rear (sunlight focused to a hot point inside the lens).
Front-mounted (left): light is filtered before it's focused. Rear-mounted (right): the front glass focuses the full-strength Sun to a burning point inside the lens.

Absolute Eclipse

Absolute Eclipse

The Absolute Eclipse team makes EU-certified solar viewing equipment in our own workshop and has chased totality across the US and Europe.

More about our team →

Frequently asked questions

Can I use a variable ND or ND1000 for the eclipse?
No. ND filters aren't dark enough and most pass dangerous near-infrared. Use a true solar filter (around OD 5) mounted on the front of the lens.
Do I need a filter for a phone camera?
A phone won't damage easily at a wide angle, but the Sun will be a tiny blown-out dot. A small piece of solar film over the phone lens gives a clean disc — and protects your eyes while you line up the shot.
Is the solar filter sheet certified?
Yes — it is OD 5.6, made to EN ISO 12312-2.