The Sun's corona during a total solar eclipse — Aragón, Spain, 12 August 2026

Eclissi solare totale · 12 agosto 2026

Dove guardare l'eclissi solare totale del 2026 in Aragón (Zaragoza)

Most of Aragón sits dead-centre in the path of totality — and it has the clearest August skies anywhere in Spain. Here's exactly when, where, and how to watch it safely.

In the path of totality
Totality begins20:29 CESTZaragoza · 12 Aug 2026
Duration~1m 25sup to ~1m 45s centre-line
Sun altitude~6°low in the west, near sunset
Coverage100%total — corona visible
Clear-sky odds Excellent · ≈85%The Ebro valley has the lowest August cloud cover on the whole path (often <30%) — visible on ~18 of the last 21 years.
Counting down to totality
days hrs min sec

If you can choose anywhere in Spain to stand for the 12 August 2026 total solar eclipse, Aragón is the quietly smart pick. It isn't the most famous name on the map — but it pairs a genuine, centre-of-the-path total eclipse with the best weather odds in the country and wide, open horizons that matter enormously when the Sun is this low. Zaragoza, Teruel and almost the whole region fall inside the band of totality; only the far north-western Cinco Villas miss out.

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

19:35Partial begins — first "bite" out of the Sun
20:29 CESTTotality — ~1m 25s. Glasses off only if total.
~20:55Sun sets with the partial phase still in progress

Because the eclipsed Sun sits only about 6° above the horizon at totality, 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

Zaragoza

~1m 25s

Easiest access · AVE high-speed rail

Head to open ground or the riverbank on the western edge of the city so nothing blocks the low Sun. Unbeatable for logistics — direct AVE from Madrid (1h15) and Barcelona (1h30) — but expect crowds, so scout your western horizon in advance.

Motorland Alcañiz

~1m 24s

Official site · huge horizons · parking

Teruel's flagship organised viewing site: a motor-racing circuit means vast flat sightlines, real parking and a festival atmosphere. One of the safest bets if you want infrastructure and a guaranteed clear west.

Javalambre Observatory

~1m 27s

Dark-sky · likely ESA broadcast site

High in the Sierra de Javalambre (Teruel), a certified Starlight dark-sky reserve and a probable European Space Agency broadcast location. The Sun is lowest here (~5°), so the western drop-off must be clean — but the setting is spectacular.

The Monegros

Wide horizons

Semi-desert · flat · dark

The badlands east of Zaragoza are made for a low-Sun eclipse: utterly flat, empty and dark, with an unbroken western horizon. Bring everything you need — services are sparse, which is exactly the point.

More official observation points across the region: Calamocha, Monreal del Campo, Épila, Cariñena and Ariza — each set up for crowds, parking and a clear line to the horizon.

The weather call

Will the sky be clear?

This is Aragón's trump card. The Ebro valley around Zaragoza records the lowest August cloud cover anywhere on the Spanish path — frequently below 30%. Run the satellite history back over the last 21 years and the eclipse would have been clearly visible on roughly 18 of them.

Compare that to the cloud-prone north coast (~60% average cloud) and you can see why seasoned eclipse-chasers quietly favour the Ebro basin and the Monegros.

The one caveat: at just 6° altitude, the Sun is shining through a lot of low atmosphere. Even on an otherwise clear day, a band of haze or distant cloud sitting on the horizon can interfere right at totality.

So: pick an exposed, slightly elevated spot with a genuinely open west, and keep half an eye on the forecast in the final 48 hours. Aragón gives you the best odds in Spain — but the horizon still has the final say.

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 an Aragonese August afternoon before it cools at totality.
  • A low, interesting foreground (a ridge, a building, the Monegros plain) 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 ~85 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.

Shop ISO 12312-2 eclipse glasses →

Quick answers

Aragón eclipse FAQ

Is Aragón in the path of totality?
Yes — almost all of it. The whole province of Teruel, nearly all of Zaragoza province and the Monegros in southern Huesca sit inside the path. Only the far north-western Cinco Villas fall just outside.
What time is the eclipse in Zaragoza?
The partial phase begins around 19:35 CEST and totality arrives at 20:29 CEST on 12 August 2026.
How long does totality last in Aragón?
About 1 minute 25 seconds in Zaragoza, stretching to roughly 1 minute 45 seconds for spots closest to the centre line.
Where's the best place in Aragón to watch?
For access, Zaragoza (AVE-connected). For organised sites with open horizons, Motorland Alcañiz or the Javalambre observatory. For wild, dark, flat horizons, the Monegros.
Do I need special glasses for the eclipse in Aragón?
Yes — certified ISO 12312-2 / CE eclipse glasses for the entire partial phase. You can only look with the naked eye during totality itself.
Will it be cloudy for the eclipse in Aragón?
Aragón has the best odds in Spain — the Ebro valley's August cloud cover is often below 30%. The only watch-out is haze right on the horizon, because the Sun is just ~6° up.

Keep exploring the path

Nearby regions to watch from

Fonti: timeanddate.com · nationaleclipse.com · eclipsophile.com (meteo) · Gobierno de Aragón · BBC Sky at Night. Gli orari sono locali (CEST).