If you’re one of the 62% of people considering visiting dark sky destinations — according to a Booking.com survey of 27,000 travelers — circle August 12, 2026, in your calendar. It could be one of the best astrotourism dates of the decade.

On that day, a total solar eclipse will sweep across parts of Greenland, Iceland, the Atlantic Ocean and Spain, while a partial solar eclipse will be visible across much of the Northern Hemisphere, including Europe and parts of North America. Then, just a few hours later, the annual Perseid meteor shower will peak under dark, moonless skies.

A Total Solar Eclipse By Day

A total solar eclipse occurs when the moon passes directly between Earth and the sun, briefly blocking the sun’s disk and revealing its delicate outer atmosphere, the corona.

On August 12, 2026, totality will be visible from remote northern Russia, eastern Greenland, western Iceland, northern Spain and the very northwestern tip of Portugal. For most places in the path, totality will last less than two minutes, with the maximum duration off the coast of Iceland around 2 minutes 18 seconds.

In Greenland and Iceland, the eclipse takes place in the late afternoon or early evening. In Spain, it happens just before sunset. Across Europe, many places will see the sun partly eclipsed as it sinks toward the horizon.

The U.S. And Canada Get A Partial Eclipse

No part of North America will see totality, but parts of the U.S. and Canada will still get a partial solar eclipse. The best U.S. views will come from Alaska and Maine. Fairbanks, Alaska, will see 37% of the Sun covered at 8:27 a.m. AKDT, while Anchorage will see 28% at 8:21 a.m. AKDT. In Maine, Presque Isle will see about 28%, Bangor 23% and Portland 19%. Boston. Massachusetts will get 16% while New York City will see 9%.

Canada gets the deeper partial eclipse. Iqaluit, Nunavut, will see 61% of the Sun covered, while St. John’s, Newfoundland and Labrador, will see 53%. Halifax, Nova Scotia, will see 31%, Montreal 18% and Toronto 8%.

For North Americans, this will not be a huge astronomical event, as 2017 and 2024’s total solar eclipses were. It will be a slight affair and be visible only with safe solar eclipse glasses or properly filtered optics.

The Perseids By Night — For Everyone

The eclipse is only half the story. Overnight on August 12-13, the Perseid meteor shower reaches its annual peak — and in 2026, the timing is excellent.

The Perseids are caused by debris left behind by Comet 109P/Swift-Tuttle. Each August, Earth moves through its stream of dust and grit, with tiny particles burning up in the atmosphere as bright meteors. They appear to radiate from the constellation Perseus, but they can streak across any part of the sky.

In a dark, rural sky, the Perseids can produce dozens of meteors per hour, sometimes up to 50 or so. The key is darkness, patience and a wide-open view of the sky. All you need are your naked eyes — and an ability to leave your smartphone alone, whose white light will render your star-blind.

The best time to watch will be after midnight and into the early hours of August 13, when any location in the Northern Hemisphere turns into the direction Earth is moving through space.

Why It’s A Perfect Astrotourism Date

Astrotourism is travel with the sky as the main event, and August 12, 2026, offers a rare reason to build an entire trip around celestial timing.

In Iceland, eclipse-chasers can combine totality with volcanic landscapes, glaciers, waterfalls and long Arctic twilight (though the “midnight sun” period will be over). In Greenland, cruise ships and expedition vessels will target remote fjords. In rural Spain, eclipse chasers will attempt to watch a total solar eclipse at sunset, then stay out for the Perseids under dark, moonless skies.

For those staying in North America, the same idea still works on a smaller scale: watch the partial eclipse in the afternoon, then head to a dark-sky site for the Perseids after midnight. It’s a great opportunity to go camping or stay in a remote lodge for the night.

How To Watch Safely

Anyone watching the partial phases of the eclipse must use solar viewing glasses or handheld solar viewers. Only during totality — and only from within the path of totality — is it safe to look directly at the eclipsed sun without eye protection. For everyone else, use solar viewing glasses or handheld solar viewers that comply with the ISO 12312-2 international safety standard.

Wishing you clear skies and wide eyes.

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