The Longest Solar Eclipse of the Century Is Coming: Day Will Turn Into Night and It Won’t Return for 157 Years
On a blistering August morning, the Sun will simply vanish. Across a narrow corridor from the Straits of Gibraltar to the Arabian Peninsula, the Moon will slide into position and blot out the solar disk, turning midday into deep twilight. For anyone stationed inside that path, the most significant eclipse of the century will be underway.
The event is the total solar eclipse of August 2, 2027, and NASA has confirmed it as the longest such eclipse of the 21st century. Calculations published by the agency’s Goddard Space Flight Center peg maximum totality at 6 minutes and 23 seconds. No other total solar eclipse this century reaches that mark.
The last time land-based observers experienced totality this long was 1991. NASA’s data places the next comparable opportunity in 2114, so the 2027 eclipse sits at a rare intersection of celestial timing and geographic reach.

The mechanism driving the extended duration is straightforward. The Moon will be near perigee, its closest approach to Earth, appearing large enough to cover the Sun completely for an unusually long stretch. Meanwhile, the point of greatest eclipse lands in a region where the Sun hangs nearly overhead, which adds precious seconds to the shadow’s sweep across the surface.
That region is North Africa. The central line carves through southern Spain, northern Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, and Egypt before crossing into Saudi Arabia and Yemen. Durations grow longer from west to east. Tarifa, at Spain’s southern tip, gets 4 minutes and 39 seconds. Tangier, just across the Strait, sees 4 minutes and 50 seconds. By Benghazi, Libya, totality reaches 6 minutes and 7 seconds. Luxor, Egypt, records 6 minutes and 19 seconds. Along the Red Sea coast, the figure hits 6 minutes and 20 seconds, just shy of the theoretical maximum.
The Sky Guarantee That Sets This Eclipse Apart
Duration is only part of the appeal. The other factor reshaping eclipse-chasing plans is meteorology. August in North Africa brings brutal heat, but it also delivers virtually cloudless skies along the zone of longest totality.
Jay Anderson, a Canadian meteorologist who produces eclipse climate analyses for Eclipsophile, told Space.com that eastern Libya and western Egypt face “no chance of cloud.” At Luxor, he said, average cloud cover in August is 0.7 percent. The worst observers are likely to encounter is thin cirrus riding the jet stream.

Dust, not cloud, may be the real visibility concern. Anderson noted a compensating effect, however. The same dry desert air that pushes midday temperatures to 43 degrees Celsius will respond fast when sunlight cuts off. “The temperature will probably drop like a stone when the eclipse happens,” he said.
That clarity is not uniform across the whole track. Around the Straits of Gibraltar, where cruise ships and tour operators are concentrating, average August cloud cover hovers near 30 percent. Localized low-pressure systems funnel moisture into the Strait, creating a persistent complication for that segment of the path.
A Path Dense With People
The human dimension is substantial. Timeanddate.com estimates 88.9 million people live inside the path of totality, more than three times the population that fell under the Moon’s shadow during the North American eclipse of April 2024.

For most, the eclipse arrives around midday. In Luxor, totality occurs at 1:02 p.m. local time with the Sun 82 degrees above the horizon. In Jeddah, it begins at 1:22 p.m. In Tarifa, the moment comes earlier, at 10:45 a.m., with the Sun somewhat lower in the east.
Partial Coverage Across Three Continents
Outside the central band, a deep partial eclipse spreads across much of Africa, Europe, and the Middle East. Lisbon will see 93 percent of the solar disk obscured. Madrid reaches 86 percent. Paris gets 52 percent. London registers 42 percent, and Berlin 34 percent.
Cairo, just south of the path, will see 95 percent coverage. Algiers and Tripoli, hugging the edge, each hit 99.9 percent obscuration without ever slipping into totality. The partial phase extends well over two hours in most of these locations.
What the Eye Will See in the Darkest Minutes
As totality approaches, two rapid optical effects sequence into view. Baily’s Beads appear first, a string of bright points where the last direct rays of sunlight stream through valleys on the Moon’s irregular edge. They yield almost immediately to the diamond ring effect, a solitary flash marking the moment before the corona is fully exposed.
Once the Moon blocks the disk entirely, the corona emerges as a pearly halo. The surrounding sky dims sharply, enough to reveal brighter stars and planets. The temperature drop in dry desert air can be abrupt and disorienting.
Safety Rules Apply From First Contact to Final Sliver
The window for naked-eye viewing is narrow and absolute. Only the period of total obscuration is safe. During every other phase, certified solar viewing glasses must stay on. Even a sliver of direct sunlight, unfiltered, can burn the retina without warning or pain.
NASA notes that the interactive map for the Total Solar Eclipse of 2027 Aug 02 calculates contact times without accounting for mountains and valleys along the lunar limb. Those corrections, which can shift predicted durations by one to three seconds, are normally published 12 to 18 months before eclipse day.
The next total solar eclipse arrives July 22, 2028, visible from Christmas Island, Cocos Islands, parts of Australia, and New Zealand. Its totality will be shorter. The 2027 event remains unmatched in duration, in the reliability of its skies, and in the sheer number of people positioned to step outside and watch the Sun disappear.
Enjoyed this article? Subscribe to our free newsletter for engaging stories, exclusive content, and the latest news.
What's Your Reaction?
Like
0
Dislike
0
Love
0
Funny
0
Angry
0
Sad
0
Wow
0
