On Wednesday, August 12, 2026, the moon will completely cover the sun for the first time over continental Europe in 27 years. The path of totality crosses Greenland, west Iceland, a tiny corner of Portugal, northern Spain, and ends at sunset over the island of Mallorca.

If you've never seen a total eclipse before, here's what people who have will tell you: photos don't prepare you for it. The temperature drops. Birds stop singing. The sun becomes a black disk surrounded by a wispy silver corona. Two minutes later it's over. Then you start planning the next one.

This is a guide to seeing it well — where to go, when totality starts, what your weather odds look like, and what else to build into the trip while you're there.


The basics: when, where, how long

DateWednesday, August 12, 2026
TypeTotal solar eclipse
PathArctic Russia → Greenland → Iceland → North Atlantic → Northern Spain → Mallorca
Maximum totality duration2 minutes 18 seconds
Next total eclipse in IcelandYear 2196
Next total eclipse in SpainAugust 2, 2027 (less than a year later)

You only experience totality if you're inside the narrow path. Outside that path, the eclipse is partial — interesting, but not transformative. Being inside the path is the entire point of the trip.


Choose your country: Iceland, Spain, Mallorca, or Greenland?

You have three real options, plus an exotic fourth. Here's the honest tradeoff:

OptionTotalityWeather oddsDifficultyBest for
Iceland (Westfjords / Snæfellsnes / Reykjanes)Up to ~2:13Poor (70–80% cloud)ModerateDrama, willing to gamble on weather
Northern Spain (Asturias, Galicia, Castile)~1:30–1:48Better — inland clearerEasyFirst-time chasers, families
MallorcaShort, at sunsetBest of the European optionsVery easyPhotographers, beach trip too
GreenlandLong, ArcticVariable, remoteHardEclipse veterans, adventurers

Our suggestion if you've never seen totality: Northern Spain. Best weather odds, easiest logistics, and you get nearly the maximum duration. Iceland is the more cinematic choice, but you're effectively gambling on cloud cover for the most important 2 minutes of your trip.


Iceland: the most dramatic option (with real weather risk)

This will be the first total solar eclipse in Iceland since 1954, and the next one won't happen until the year 2196. There has been talk of closing the area to car traffic and ferrying people by bus at Látrabjarg, where totality lasts longest. Plan early.

Iceland timing

The eclipse is a mid-afternoon event. Approximate local times (UTC+0):

PhaseTime (local)
First contact (partial begins)16:47 (4:47 PM)
Totality begins (Reykjavík)17:48 (5:48 PM)
Totality ends~17:49
Last contact (eclipse fully ends)18:47 (6:47 PM)

The sun will be 24.5° above the horizon at totality — high enough to be easy to see, low enough that photographs will have dramatic foreground potential.

Best Iceland viewing locations

LocationTotalityNotes
Látrabjarg cliffs (Westfjords)~2:13Longest in Iceland; remote, narrow roads, likely tightly managed
Snæfellsnes Peninsula (Ólafsvík, Hellissandur)~1:50–2:00Iconic Snæfellsjökull volcano backdrop; well-paved roads
Reykjanes Peninsula (Keflavík area)~1:39Closest to international airport — easiest logistics
Reykjavík (Perlan deck)~1:00Convenient if not chasing maximum duration

Iceland's weather problem (and what to do about it)

Cloud cover averages about 70 to 80 percent generally across the island compared to the 80 to 90 percent offshore. This is genuinely a problem. Strategies that improve your odds:

  1. Rent a car. Mobility is your single biggest hedge. If clouds threaten your planned spot, you can drive 60–100 km on eclipse morning to a clearer location.
  2. Stay flexible on your viewing site until 24 hours before. Book accommodation in Reykjavík (lots of beds) and treat the actual viewing spot as a day-of decision based on the Icelandic Met Office cloud forecast.
  3. Consider a guided bus tour. Local guides understand Icelandic weather patterns and have been pre-scouting cloud-clear corridors for months.
  4. Pick the Snæfellsnes peninsula over the Westfjords. Westfjords have longer totality but narrower roads, smaller populations, and getting caught behind a slow vehicle as totality approaches is a real risk. Snæfellsnes balances duration with accessibility.

What else to do in Iceland that week

August in Iceland is summer. Long daylight, ~12–15°C (54–59°F), green landscapes. Pair the eclipse with:

  • Whale watching from Húsavík (humpbacks peak in July–August)
  • Geyser, Gullfoss, Þingvellir — the Golden Circle, doable in a day
  • Glacier hiking (Sólheimajökull, Vatnajökull edges)
  • Puffin colonies — they leave Iceland in mid-August, so timing is tight
  • The Reykjavík food scene

Important caveat about northern lights: despite what you may read, you will not see the aurora during eclipse totality. Totality looks like deep twilight, not night — the sky doesn't get dark enough. Auroras require true night, which Iceland barely has in mid-August.

That said: if you're staying in Iceland after the eclipse, you may catch the aurora borealis in the evening as summer transitions into fall. Aurora season ramps up in late August. Extending your trip by a week is a legitimate option.


Spain: the safe-bet option

Northern Spain — primarily Asturias, Galicia, and Castile-León — gets the eclipse about one hour before sunset. That gives you genuinely beautiful low-angle lighting before and after the eclipse, and the weather is dramatically better than Iceland.

Spain timing

The eclipse occurs in late afternoon / early evening, with totality between roughly 19:30 and 20:45 local time depending on where you are along the path (Spain is UTC+2 in August).

Best Spain viewing locations

LocationTotalityNotes
Oviedo (Asturias)~1:48Just shy of Spain's maximum; well-connected, plenty of beds
Burgos~1:30Inland; lower cloud risk than the Cantabrian coast
León~1:30Beautiful historic centre; great food
Bilbao~0:29 onlyOn the edge of the path — don't stay in Bilbao itself, go inland
Valencia (coastal)~1:00If you also want Mediterranean

Spain's weather is better, but not perfect

However, along the northern coast, the possibility of clouds is greater than elsewhere along the path in Spain.

Strategy: stay inland (Burgos, León) rather than coastal (Santander, Gijón). The Cantabrian coast catches Atlantic clouds; the inland plateau is reliably clearer.

What else to do in Spain that week

August in Spain is hot — 28–35°C (82–95°F) in central regions. Pair the eclipse with:

  • Camino de Santiago stage walks (Burgos and León are on the French route)
  • Picos de Europa national park (between Asturias and León)
  • Rioja wine region (close to Burgos)
  • Bilbao Guggenheim (the city itself isn't ideal, but it's a great day before/after)
  • Pintxos in San Sebastián (just outside the path; visit before/after)

Mallorca: where the eclipse ends at sunset

The path of totality leaves the Iberian Peninsula and crosses the Balearic Sea, with the last bit of totality visible over Mallorca as the sun sets into the Mediterranean. Totality is short here, but the visual experience of a totally eclipsed sun setting into the sea is unique in this eclipse — and possibly unique in any near-term eclipse.

If you want photographs that don't look like every other eclipse photograph, Mallorca is the bet. You'll see:

  • The corona against a colour-saturated sunset sky
  • The eclipsed sun framed against the Mediterranean horizon
  • Diamond ring effect right at the horizon (very rare to capture)

Caveats: totality is brief, and atmospheric haze near the horizon can reduce contrast. But for serious eclipse photographers and travellers who also want a beach trip, this is the strongest creative pick.


Greenland: for the adventurous

Eastern Greenland sits squarely in the path with long totality durations. Settlements like Ittoqqortoormiit and the Scoresby Sund region offer Arctic dramatic backdrops — icebergs, fjords, glaciers.

Reality check: Greenland has limited tourism infrastructure. Flights are expensive and infrequent. Most travellers visit on small expedition cruises that have been planning around this eclipse for years. Beds in eclipse-path settlements are likely already gone.

If you're considering Greenland: book through an expedition cruise operator now if any berths remain. Don't try to DIY this in the final 3 months.


Weather strategy across all locations

Eclipse viewing is fundamentally a weather gamble. Some honest principles:

  1. Start watching forecasts ~14 days out — by then 7-day forecasts are meaningful.
  2. Have a Plan B route on eclipse morning. Iceland especially. Have a car, know two alternate viewing sites within driving range, watch the cloud-cover forecast map until 6 hours before totality.
  3. Don't over-commit to a remote location. Látrabjarg has the longest Iceland totality, but if Reykjanes peninsula has clear skies and Westfjords are clouded over, you can drive 30 minutes to Reykjanes — you can't drive 5 hours to Westfjords on eclipse morning.
  4. Have a Plan C. If your day-of weather is hopeless across your whole region, accept that you'll watch a partial eclipse from where you are. You've already paid for the trip. Enjoy what's there. Plan another eclipse trip in 2027 (Spain again on August 2) or 2028.
  5. Look at the August climate, not the August forecast. Forecasts more than 10 days out are unreliable. Climate (historical August averages) is your only signal before booking. Spain wins on this. Iceland loses on this.

Planning timeline: what to book when

WhenWhat
Now (May 2026)Accommodation along the path of totality. Major inland Spanish cities (Burgos, León) are still bookable. Iceland is already heavily booked; check daily for cancellations.
June 2026Flights. Direct flights to Reykjavík, Madrid, Bilbao, Oviedo, Palma de Mallorca are filling. Use flexible-date searches.
June 2026Eclipse glasses (ISO 12312-2 certified). Buy from astronomical retailers (American Astronomical Society maintains a verified-supplier list). Do not buy off random Amazon listings without verification.
June 2026Rental car (Iceland especially). Vehicles are scarce around the eclipse.
July 2026Photography gear. Solar filter for your lens (not for your eyes — the camera needs its own filter). Tripod. Practice with the filter before you arrive.
August 1–10, 2026Start tracking 14-day weather forecasts.
August 11, 2026Drive/travel to your viewing region. Have alternates ready.
August 12, 2026Be in position 2 hours before first contact. Have backup snacks and water. Phone charged.
August 13, 2026Recover. Plan next eclipse (August 2, 2027 in Spain — a partial repeat).

Frequently asked questions

Is the eclipse safe to watch?

Looking directly at the sun without proper protection — even during a partial eclipse — can cause permanent eye damage. Only during totality itself (the 1–2 minutes when the sun is completely covered) is it safe to look without glasses. Before and after totality, eclipse glasses or solar filters are mandatory.

Can I just watch it from London / Berlin / Paris?

You'll see a deep partial eclipse — interesting, worth stepping outside for — but fundamentally different from totality. A partial eclipse and a total eclipse are not on the same spectrum; they are different experiences.

How crowded will it be?

Very. Iceland especially. Estimates suggest hundreds of thousands of additional visitors in the path of totality regions. Major Iceland hotels in the Westfjords and Snæfellsnes are already at or near capacity for August 11–13, 2026.

What if it's cloudy?

You'll experience darkness, temperature drop, and the surreal stillness of totality — but not the visual corona. Many eclipse chasers say even a clouded totality is moving. The real backup plan is to book another eclipse trip.

When is the next total eclipse in Europe?

August 2, 2027. Crosses southern Spain (Cádiz, Málaga, Sevilla, Mallorca) and parts of North Africa. If you miss 2026 or want a better-weather rematch, this is your second chance — only 11 months later.

Can I see the northern lights and the eclipse on the same trip?

You can, but not at the same time. The eclipse is in August (light summer nights, virtually no aurora visibility in Iceland). To see the aurora, stay in Iceland through late September or visit later in the year.


After the eclipse, before you fly home

This eclipse is in mid-August — a perfect window for a longer trip. Some pairings that work:

CountryAdd-on
IcelandAurora viewing in late September (return trip), whale watching, Golden Circle
SpainCamino de Santiago, Picos de Europa, Rioja wineries, Costa Brava
MallorcaCala viewing, Tramuntana mountains, Palma food scene
GreenlandIceberg cruising, Ilulissat Icefjord

In closing

The 2026 European total solar eclipse is the rarest free thing you'll have a chance to see in the next decade. Eclipses themselves aren't rare globally — there's one somewhere on Earth every 18 months — but Europe goes 20–30 years between them, and Iceland goes centuries.

The hard work isn't seeing the eclipse. The hard work is choosing the right country, picking a viewing site that maximises your weather odds, booking accommodation while there are still beds, and building a trip you'd want to take even if every cloud in Europe gathered overhead on the day.

That's the bet. The 2-minute pay-off is worth it.

Last updated 15 May 2026 and will be revised as we get closer to the eclipse. Sources include the National Eclipse Foundation, Eclipsophile climate data, and the Icelandic Met Office. Always verify safety information from official sources before viewing.