As always, the Moon will be putting on a show this year. Here are five reasons to look up at the night (or day) sky in 2025.
Full Moon is the only Moon phase in which the Moon is up all night. Moonrises and moonsets always happen around sunset and sunrise. The great thing about a Full Moon is that it still appears full in the days before and after.
If you look southwest to west shortly after sunset around February 1, you’ll spot Venus close to the Crescent Moon, with Saturn close by.
Around March 2, look to the western horizon just after sunset to find Venus close to the Crescent Moon. As a bonus in the Northern Hemisphere, you might be able to spot Mercury close by.
After sunset around April 1, look west to find the Pleiades star cluster very close to the Crescent Moon. This cluster is also famously known as the Seven Sisters.
Looking east, just before sunrise around April 25, Venus and Saturn triangulate a very young Crescent Moon. And if you’re in the Southern Hemisphere, you might be able to spot Mercury nearby.
Search for the Moon in our Night Sky Map on the dates above and use the slider to find your best time to see the Crescent Moon, planets, and stars align. The orientation of the planets, stars, and the Moon varies slightly depending on your location on Earth.
A total lunar eclipse on March 13–14 will be followed two weeks later by a partial solar eclipse across an area of North America and Europe on March 29.
Six months after that, there will be another total lunar eclipse on September 7–8, paired with a partial solar eclipse across a southern region of the globe on September 21.
A lunar eclipse happens when the Full Moon is on the opposite side of Earth to the Sun, and a solar eclipse occurs when the New Moon passes between the Earth and the Sun.
There are two main definitions of a Black Moon: monthly and seasonal. The Black Moon on August 23, 2025 (August 22 in western time zones) falls under the seasonal definition.
A seasonal Black Moon is the third New Moon in a season of four New Moons, while a monthly Black Moon is defined as the second New Moon in a single calendar month with two New Moons. Both definitions are the counterpart to the Blue Moon definitions.
Like any other New Moon, Black Moons are invisible in the sky. This is because the Moon is between Earth and the Sun in its orbit at this Moon phase, making it a perfect time to look at the stars as the sky will be nice and dark. Also, you might be lucky and catch the very final shooting stars of the Perseid meteor shower while you’re out.
Without measuring brightness and size, it can be difficult to spot the difference between a “normal” Full Moon and a Super Full Moon as it’s only 6%–7% bigger than an average Full Moon (in years 1550–2650).
However, whenever we see the Full Moon close to the horizon, our brains trick us into thinking it is much bigger than it actually is. This is known as the Moon illusion.