Overview
- Most of the world will have visibility, with about 86% of the global population in the path, while North America largely misses the eclipse.
- Totality is expected to last about 85 minutes, with the full event spanning several hours depending on location.
- From the UK, the eclipse’s actual maximum occurs at 7:11 pm when the Moon is below the horizon, and the UK’s observed peak comes around 7:33 pm BST shortly after moonrise.
- Viewing in the UK varies by location, with eastern England seeing the most totality (Great Yarmouth nearly 29 minutes) and places farther west, including much of Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland, seeing only a partial phase.
- Official schedules include Korea’s timeline from the Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute, which lists totality from 2:30 a.m. to 3:53 a.m. KST with the greatest eclipse at 3:11 a.m.