The Next Lunar Eclipse: Night Of The Red Moon! - Farmers' Almanac
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Love sky events? Mark your calendar for Tuesday, March 3, 2026 to catch the Moon turning red during a total lunar eclipse. The best views in the United States will be on the West Coast and Hawaii. Luckily, you won’t need binoculars or telescopes to see it (and unlike an eclipse of the Sun, no eye protection will be needed). Here is everything you need to know about the Red Moon 2026, including US dates and times:
Red Moon 2026 Times
If you are on the United States West Coast, you may witness the Moon turning red during the “total eclipse” period, beginning at 3:03 a.m. Pacific Standard Time on March 3, 2026.
| Eastern Standard Time | CDT | MDT | PDT | |
| Moon enters umbra | 4:49 a.m. | 3:49 a.m. | 2:49 a.m. | 1:49 a.m. |
| Total eclipse begins | 6:03 a.m. | 5:03 a.m. | 4:03 a.m. | 3:03 a.m. |
| Mid-eclipse | 7:02 a.m. | 6:02 a.m. | 5:02 a.m. | 4:02 a.m. |
| Total eclipse ends | 8:17 a.m. | 7:17 a.m. | 6:17 a.m. | 5:17 a.m. |
| Moon leaves umbra | 9:23 a.m. | 8:23 a.m. | 7:23 a.m. | 6:23 a.m. |
Psst … Our friends at the Adler Planetarium—the oldest Planetarium in the Western Hemisphere—offered a free telescopic broadcast of the Total Lunar Eclipse 2025. It’s definitely worth the watch!
How Lunar Eclipses Work
Earth casts a long, cone-shaped shadow that stretches into space for about 863,000 miles. More often than not, the full Moon passes either above or below this shadow. But on special occasions—when the Sun, Earth, and Moon are properly aligned—the Moon’s path will take it directly into the Earth’s shadow, which causes a lunar eclipse! Learn more about eclipses: dates, myths, and superstitions.
Typically, the amount of time that the Moon spends completely immersed in the Earth’s darkest shadow lasts about 50 minutes or less. But the upcoming eclipse will be unusually long. The Moon will be totally eclipsed for 67 minutes.
When the full Moon enters the Earth’s dark central shadow (umbra), its left edge will appear to crumble away. The Moon will move steadily into the shadow until its last remaining sliver becomes tucked inside the shadow’s outer rim. That will be the start of the “total phase” of the eclipse.
Man In The Moon Gets Red In The Face!
You might expect the Moon to completely disappear from view when it becomes immersed in the Earth’s shadow, but it doesn’t. Instead, you may see the Moon turning red during this darkest phase of the eclipse. This is because some of the sunlight striking our Earth is diffused and scattered by our atmosphere, the Earth’s shadow is not totally dark. Near the horizon, at sunrise and sunset we see red and orange colorations. Enough of this light reaches the Moon to give it a faint coppery glow—even when it is totally eclipsed.
Depending on the state of our atmosphere during totality, the Moon might resemble a shiny new penny or glow softly with hues of brick red, or chocolate brown.
Sometimes, however, after a major volcanic eruption, which can fill the upper layers of our atmosphere – the stratosphere – with ash and dust, most of the red and orange light is blocked from entering the Earth’s shadow and the result is that the Moon appears a sooty gray or even nearly disappears completely from view. This has happened in 1963, 1982, and 1992.
A Sight For Billions
Billions of people will get a chance to see the “Red Moon 2026.”
It may come as a surprise to learn that eclipses of the Moon are less frequent than eclipses of the Sun. Yet, because they have a much larger viewing range, total eclipses of the Moon are more commonly observed.
To see a total eclipse of the Sun, one must be positioned within the path that the Moon’s dark shadow will take across the surface of the Earth. That path may be thousands of miles long, but usually less than 167 miles wide.
In contrast, a total eclipse of the Moon is visible wherever the Moon happens to be above the horizon when the eclipse is taking place. Since from start to finish, our upcoming eclipse will last nearly three and a half hours, and taking into account the rotation of the Earth on its axis, more than half of the Earth’s surface – the nighttime side – will be facing the Moon during the eclipse.

The Moon’s Temperature Will Drop Shocking Low!
Interestingly, when the Earth’s shadow sweeps across the lunar landscape, the temperatures on the Moon’s surface will drop off rapidly. During a total lunar eclipse in February 1971, scientific instruments left at the Ocean of Storms by astronauts of Apollo 12 and the Fra Mauro Highlands by astronauts of Apollo 14, both registered a sudden and sharp drop in temperature.
The temperature dropped from 162°F just prior to the start of the eclipse, to -153°F during the total phase—a drop of 315°F in only about an hour’s time! Just before the eclipse, the Sun had been shining at almost noontime intensity at both sites. Without an atmosphere to trap the heat, the complete cutting off of sunlight allows whatever heat that had built up on the lunar surface to radiate rapidly out into space.
Initially, it was thought that such a “thermal shock wave” might lead to the cracking of rocks on the surface and the release of gas from within the Moon, as well as damaging the instruments themselves. However this has not been the case.
In addition, lunar eclipses have been of value in past studies of the lunar surface. Through infrared photography, it has been found that certain spots on the Moon’s surface remain relatively warm even as it cools during the eclipse. This suggests that these spots are sites of large chunks of rock that extend well below the surface and bring up heat.
Hope For Clear Skies!
We hope that the weather will cooperate to allow you, as well as members of your family and friends to enjoy this interesting (and free) celestial event.
Many years ago, just before an eclipse, Dr. Ken Franklin, an astronomer at New York’s Hayden Planetarium took a phone call from someone with a question: “Are you selling tickets for the eclipse?” “No sir,” Dr. Franklin replied. “This sky show is being staged by an independent producer.” Indeed, this “sky show” is timeless: Earth’s shadow has darkened the Moon since before Tut was pharaoh, before there were even eyes for looking skyward.
If you can’t stay for the whole show, drop in now and then. This will be the best spectacle of its kind all year.
Join the Discussion
Are you looking forward to the Red Moon 2026?
Have you ever seen the Moon turning red before?
Share your experience in the comments!
About the author Related Posts
Joe Rao
Joe Rao is an esteemed astronomer who writes for Space.com, Sky & Telescope, and Natural History Magazine. Mr. Rao is a regular contributor to the Farmers' Almanac and serves as an associate lecturer for the Hayden Planetarium in New York City.
Farmers' Almanac Staff
This article was published by the Staff at FarmersAlmanac.com. Any questions? Contact us at [email protected].
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