Stargazing Forecast

Will tonight's sky be worth it?

Tell us where you are and we read tonight's clouds, the moon's brightness and how dark your skies really are, then hand back one honest score for the hours after dark.

Add a location
Where are you stargazing from?
Sets how dark your site is. Suburbs is a typical default.

Treat the score as odds, not a promise. Clouds do what they like.

Stargazing score ·
Stargazing score

Add your location to see tonight's stargazing score.

Moon phase
Moon phase
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How it works

What drives the score

Four things make or break a night under the stars. We weigh each one, then roll them into a single score from 0 to 10.

1 40%

Clear sky

The biggest factor by far. We look at how cloudy it gets during tonight's dark hours, and even a hazy, half-clouded sky pulls the score down hard.

2 28%

Site darkness

How much light pollution sits over your spot. A truly dark site shows thousands more stars than a glowing suburb, so where you stand matters almost as much as the weather.

3 22%

Dark moon

A bright moon drowns out faint stars and the Milky Way. A new moon, or a moon that has already set, leaves the sky at its inkiest.

4 10%

Dark window

How many genuinely dark hours you actually get after twilight fades. Short summer nights leave you very little time to work with.

Best dark-sky escapes

Best national parks for stargazing

Every park below is a certified International Dark Sky Place. We rank them on a transparent score that blends site darkness with how often the sky stays clear at night.

# Park State Certified Tier Bortle Clear nights Score
A figure marked is our own estimate, used where DarkSky International and the NPS do not publish a number for that specific unit. Certification year and tier are verified facts. The methodology explains how the estimates are made.
Ranking score blends site darkness (about two thirds) with how often nights are clear (about one third), on a 0 to 100 scale.
Best stargazing towns

Best towns for stargazing trips

We ranked and compared towns in the UK and US by sky darkness, average cloud cover, elevation and access to recognised dark-sky areas.

# Town Score Avg cloud cover Elevation Nearby dark-sky area
Methodology

How the score works

No black box. For your location we read tonight's cloud cover, the moon's brightness, how dark your spot is and how many truly dark hours you get, then weigh them into a single number you can trust.

  • Clouds carry the most weight, so a clear night beats everything else. We look at the forecast for the dark hours specifically, not whatever it happens to be doing right now, which is why a clear evening still scores well after sunset.
  • Your darkness picker sets how much light pollution sits over your site. City skies wash out all but the brightest stars, a certified dark-sky park shows thousands more.
  • The moon's brightness comes from its phase, worked out right in your browser with no lookup. A bright moon costs you points, and we ease off when the moon has already dropped below the horizon.
  • The dark window is how long the sky stays genuinely dark after twilight. When you are online we pull tonight's exact twilight times, otherwise we estimate them from your latitude and the date. Near midsummer at far-north latitudes the sky may never fully darken, and we say so plainly rather than show a misleading number.
The parks ranking

How parks are ranked

Each park's rank blends how dark the site is with how often its nights run clear. Both feed a single 0 to 100 score, so the order is fully reproducible.

  • Certification year and tier are verified against DarkSky International's registry and the National Park Service.
  • Where those bodies do not publish a number for a specific unit, the darkness rating and the share of clear nights are our own estimates, drawn from the park's tier, how remote it is and its regional climate. Those figures are marked (est.) in the table so you always know which numbers are measured and which are reasoned.
  • Download the CSV to see every value, including which ones are estimated.

Sources. DarkSky International certified-places registry, NPS Night Skies program, Open-Meteo for the forecast, sunrise-sunset.org for twilight times, and Sky & Telescope for the Bortle dark-sky scale.

A forecast of a chaotic sky is odds, not a promise. Always check a current local forecast before you drive out.

The towns ranking

How towns are ranked

To identify the best towns for stargazing trips, we compare US and UK towns separately using five factors: sky darkness, average cloud cover, access to recognised dark-sky areas, elevation and visitor practicality.

  • Sky darkness carries the most weight. For the final published version, sky darkness should be measured with a licensed light-pollution source such as VIIRS Nighttime Lights, supported by recognised dark-sky status and surrounding landscape context.
  • Average cloud cover is included because a very dark place is less useful for visitors if clear nights are rare. The ranking uses NASA POWER cloud amount for each town's coordinates.
  • Dark-sky access rewards towns near certified DarkSky places, national parks, observatories, reserves or established public viewing areas.
  • Elevation is treated as a smaller supporting factor because higher places can have clearer atmospheric conditions, but elevation alone does not guarantee good stargazing.
  • US and UK towns are ranked separately because climate, settlement patterns and access to dark-sky areas differ too much for a fair combined table.

Additional sources for the towns ranking. VIIRS Nighttime Lights from the Earth Observation Group, NASA POWER cloud climatology, USGS Elevation Point Query Service, DarkSky International Places, and CPRE dark skies resources.