Éclipse solaire totale · 12 August 2026
Où observer l'éclipse solaire totale de 2026 au Portugal
Portugal has just one tiny window of totality — about 26 seconds in the remote north-east, around Bragança's Montesinho park. The rest of the country sees a deep partial (98% in Porto) low over the Atlantic at sunset on 12 August 2026.
In the path of totalityPortugal is a special case in the 2026 eclipse. Almost the entire country sees a deep partial — but in one remote pocket of the far north-east, around the Montesinho Natural Park near Bragança, the path of totality just clips Portuguese soil for about 26 seconds. It is the only place in the country where the Sun fully disappears. Everywhere else — Porto at 98%, Lisbon and the south rather less — it is a dramatic partial, but still daylight.
Below: exactly where totality touches Portugal, how deep the partial runs elsewhere, the best places to watch, and how to reach the path safely.
The timeline
When the eclipse happens
The Sun is low in the west near sunset across Portugal, so an open western horizon is essential. Only the far north-east reaches totality; everywhere else, however deep, stays daylight.
Where to set up
The best places to watch
Montesinho & Bragança
~26s totalityThe far north-east corner of Portugal — the Montesinho Natural Park near Bragança — is the single place in the country inside the path of totality, with about 26 seconds of true darkness. Remote and high; arrive very early, bring everything, and pick a clear western horizon.
Miranda do Douro & the NE border
Near-totalThe north-eastern border country around Miranda do Douro sits right on the edge of the path — a very deep partial, and an easy hop to the totality zone or across into Spain (Zamora and Castilla).
Porto
~98%Porto sees about 98% of the Sun covered, low over the Atlantic — spectacular, but still daylight. For genuine totality it's a drive north-east to Bragança, or across into Galicia.
Braga & the Minho
Deep partialThe Minho in Portugal's far north-west gets a very deep partial and is the closest base to Galicia's totality just over the border. A strong choice if you plan to cross into Spain.
Lisbon
Deep partialLisbon and the south see a smaller — but still striking — partial, the Sun low over the Atlantic near sunset. No totality here; head far north-east, or into Spain, for that.
Montesinho Natural Park (Parque Natural de Montesinho) near Bragança is the headline totality site; expect local viewing events and crowds across the Trás-os-Montes region.
The weather call
Will the sky be clear?
Inland, the high country of Trás-os-Montes around Bragança often has clear, dry August evenings — good news for the one corner with totality.
The Atlantic coast is more of a gamble: Porto and Lisbon can pick up low cloud or sea haze sitting right on the western horizon, exactly where the low Sun will be.
Wherever you watch, find an open, flat view to the west.
If totality is the goal, the smart move is to base in the north-east near Bragança and Montesinho, or simply cross the border into northern Spain, where the path is wider and the August skies are among Europe's clearest.
Plan the day
Your eclipse-day checklist
- Certified ISO 12312-2 / CE eclipse glasses — keep them on the whole time outside the brief Bragança totality.
- A clear, flat western horizon — the Sun is low near sunset.
- For totality: head to the Montesinho / Bragança area, or cross into northern Spain.
- Arrive very early — the NE totality zone is small and remote.
- A west-facing viewpoint, scouted the evening before at the same time.
- A solar filter on any camera or phone for the partial phases.
- Outside the NE corner there is no glasses-off moment — keep them on.
- Watch the coastal forecast for low western cloud in the final 48 hours.
⚠ 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
Portugal eclipse FAQ
Does Portugal see totality in 2026?
How much of the eclipse will Porto and Lisbon see?
What time is the eclipse in Portugal?
Where is the best place to watch in Portugal?
Do I need eclipse glasses in Portugal?
How do I get from Portugal into the path of totality?
Keep exploring the path
Nearby regions to watch from
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Read the guide →Sources : timeanddate.com · nationaleclipse.com · eclipsophile.com (météo) · Gobierno de Aragón · BBC Sky at Night. Les heures sont locales (CEST).