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Best Time to See Meteor Shower Tonight

When and where to see tonight's meteor shower. Viewing tips, peak times, and which direction to look. Updated for 2025.

☄️ Meteor Shower: 7 events listed below with dates, times, and details. See the countdown and full schedule below.

Schedule
🌠
Quadrantids
Fri, January 3, 2025 – January 4
Best viewing: After midnight

Quadrantids peak January 3-4. Up to 120/hour but short peak. Look NE.

🌠
Lyrids
Tue, April 22, 2025 – April 23
Best viewing: After midnight

Lyrids peak April 22-23. ~20/hour. Look toward Lyra constellation.

🌠
Eta Aquarids
Mon, May 5, 2025 – May 6
Best viewing: 3-5 AM

Eta Aquarids peak May 5-6. ~40/hour. Halley's Comet debris.

🌠
Perseids
Tue, August 12, 2025 – August 13
Best viewing: After midnight

Perseids peak Aug 12-13. Up to 100/hour. Most popular shower of the year.

🌠
Orionids
Tue, October 21, 2025 – October 22
Best viewing: After midnight

Orionids peak Oct 21-22. ~20/hour. Look toward Orion.

🌠
Leonids
Mon, November 17, 2025 – November 18
Best viewing: After midnight

Leonids peak Nov 17-18. ~15/hour. Occasionally spectacular storms.

🌠
Geminids
Sat, December 13, 2025 – December 14
Best viewing: 9 PM – 2 AM

Geminids peak Dec 13-14. Up to 150/hour. Best shower of the year.

Meteor shower viewing tips
🌑
Find dark skies
Get away from city lights. Even 30 minutes from a city helps dramatically.
👀
Let eyes adjust
Give your eyes 20-30 minutes to adjust to the dark. Avoid looking at your phone.
🧭
Look up, not at the radiant
Meteors can appear anywhere in the sky. Lie on your back and look straight up.
Best after midnight
Most showers are best after midnight when the Earth faces into the meteor stream.

About this meteor event

Meteor showers are caused by Earth passing through trails of debris left by comets and asteroids. This page lists 7 viewing windows starting January 3, 2025. Each shower has a characteristic radiant — the constellation it appears to stream from — and a parent body responsible for the debris.

Benefits

  • ·Shows the peak night and full active-period range
  • ·Lists meteors-per-hour (ZHR) at peak
  • ·Identifies the radiant constellation for direction-finding
  • ·Suggests best viewing window (typically after midnight)
  • ·Counts down to the next shower in real time

How it works

Meteors are tiny grains (mostly dust to pebble-sized) that burn up at 70-100 km altitude as they hit Earth's atmosphere at 15-70 km/s. The radiant moves higher in the sky as the night progresses, which is why most showers peak between midnight and dawn.

The American Meteor Society publishes annual ZHR tables. Light pollution is the biggest enemy of meteor watching — a Bortle Class 4 site will show 5x more meteors than a Class 7 (suburban) site. The Geminids and Perseids consistently rank as the year's best showers; the Quadrantids have the highest peak rate but a sharper, briefer peak.

Who uses this meteor event

Astrophotographers planning all-night sessions, dark-sky park visitors, teachers running astronomy field trips, and anyone wanting a calendar of free, naked-eye sky events.

Best Time to See Meteor Shower Tonight

When and where to see tonight's meteor shower. Viewing tips, peak times, and which direction to look. Updated for 2025.

Related

Frequently asked questions

When and where do I look to see the meteor showers?

peak nights are listed above with exact dates and viewing windows. Best viewing is typically after midnight when Earth's "leading edge" rotates into the meteor stream. Look at the dark sky (don't focus on the radiant constellation — meteors appear all over the sky). Lie back, allow 15-20 min for eyes to dark-adapt.

Will moonlight wash out meteor showers?

Moonlight is the biggest variable. A full moon during peak night can drop visible meteor count by 60-70%. The showers above note any moon-conflict warnings. Best years for major showers are when the new moon falls near the peak. NASA publishes annual moon-shower compatibility forecasts.

Do I need a telescope for the meteor showers?

No — telescopes hurt because they narrow your field of view. Meteors flash across large patches of sky in 1-2 seconds. Naked eye is the standard tool. Binoculars also too narrow. The only useful equipment is a comfortable reclining chair, warm clothes, and patience.

Why do meteor showers happen in the way they do?

Earth crosses streams of debris left by comets and asteroids each year. The Perseids come from comet 109P/Swift-Tuttle; the Geminids from asteroid 3200 Phaethon (rare for an asteroid source); the Leonids from comet 55P/Tempel-Tuttle. Earth hits the same streams at the same time each year, which is why showers recur on consistent dates.

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