Pilnīgs Saules aptumsums · 12. augusts 2026
Kur skatīties 2026. gada pilno Saules aptumsumu Burgosā un Kastīlijā un Leonā
Burgos and the Castilla y León meseta sit close to the centre line — about 1 minute 44 seconds of totality at roughly 20:28 CEST on 12 August 2026, among the longest anywhere in Spain. Here's exactly when, where and how to watch it safely.
In the path of totalityIf you want the best all-round combination of long totality, clear skies and easy access on 12 August 2026, the Castilla y León meseta is the place. Burgos, León, Valladolid, Palencia and Soria sit close to the centre line of the path, so almost the whole heartland falls inside the band of totality — and it pairs a genuine, near-centre total eclipse with strong inland weather odds and wide, open horizons that matter enormously when the Sun is this low.
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
Because the eclipsed Sun sits only about 8 degrees 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
Burgos
~1m 44sBurgos sees about 1 minute 44 seconds of totality, from 20:28:24 to 20:30:08 CEST — close to the longest anywhere in Spain. Head to open ground on the western edge of the city so nothing blocks the low Sun, which is only around 8 degrees up. Well connected by road and rail from Madrid and the north, so expect crowds — scout your western horizon in advance and arrive early.
León
~1m 45sLeón sits very near the centre line with around 1 minute 45 seconds of totality. The open plains give wide western horizons, important with the Sun only about 8 degrees up. The Las Médulas heritage site to the west is a dramatic foreground but will draw crowds — arrive early and confirm your horizon is genuinely clear to the west.
Cañón del Río Lobos (Soria)
~1m 42sThe Cañón del Río Lobos natural park in Soria gets about 1 minute 42 seconds of totality in a striking setting. It is a popular park, so it will draw crowds and access may be restricted — arrive well ahead, check parking and find an open clearing with a clean view low to the west.
Valladolid
~1m 40sValladolid sits firmly inside the band of totality on the open central meseta, with August sunshine around 68–78%. Direct high-speed rail from Madrid makes it easy to reach, so expect company — move to open ground on the western edge of the city for an unobstructed line to the low Sun and arrive early.
Palencia
~1m 43sPalencia falls inside the totality band with around 1 minute 43 seconds and is a quieter alternative to Burgos and Valladolid. The surrounding plains offer wide, flat western horizons — ideal when the Sun is only about 8 degrees up. Pick a field or low ridge edge to the west of town and test the view the evening before.
Other strong vantage points across the region include Soria's Cañón del Río Lobos, Aranda de Duero, and the open plains around Palencia and Valladolid — each with wide horizons and a clear line low to the west.
The weather call
Will the sky be clear?
The dry meseta is the heartland's quiet advantage. August sunshine runs around 68–78% across León, Burgos and Valladolid, and run the history back over the last 21 years and the eclipse would have been clearly visible on roughly 17 of them.
Compare that to the cloud-prone north coast and you can see why the inland plains are the safer bet for this evening event.
The one caveat: at just 8 degrees 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 spot with a genuinely open west, and keep half an eye on the forecast in the final 48 hours. The meseta gives strong odds — 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. Burgos and the popular natural parks will draw crowds and full car parks.
- Water, sun cover and a hat — it's a meseta August evening before it cools at totality.
- A low, interesting foreground — a ridge, a building, the open 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 about 1 minute 44 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
Burgos & Castilla y León eclipse FAQ
Is Burgos in the path of totality?
How long does totality last in Burgos?
What time does the eclipse start and reach totality?
What are the weather odds in August?
Why does the low Sun matter when choosing a spot?
Do I need special glasses to watch safely?
Keep exploring the path
Nearby regions to watch from
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Read the guide →Avoti: timeanddate.com · nationaleclipse.com · eclipsophile.com (laikapstākļi) · Gobierno de Aragón · BBC Sky at Night. Laiki ir vietējie (CEST).