40.428°, -3.594° · 677 m a.s.l.
Visible
The Sun clears local terrain by 6.66° at C3.
100%
You'll see full totality, but the Sun will set before the partial phase ends — an unusually epic finale.
Total eclipse · 100% obscuration
See the eclipse from Rosas minute by minute
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Photo and links for Madrid, the municipality this district belongs to.
Photo: Dmitry Dzhus from London · CC BY 2.0 · Wikimedia Commons
| Phase | UTC | Local time | Sun alt. | Sun az. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| C1 — Partial begins | 17:36 UTC | 19:36 | +17.6° | 274.7° |
| C2 — Totality begins | 18:32 UTC | 20:32 | +7.3° | 283.4° |
| Maximum | 18:32 UTC | 20:32 | +7.3° | 283.4° |
| C3 — Totality ends | 18:32 UTC | 20:32 | +7.3° | 283.4° |
| C4 — Partial ends | 19:24 UTC | 21:24 | -1.7° | 291.7° |
Look toward WNW (291.7°)
Azimuth at C4
291.7° WNW
Sun altitude at C4
-1.67°
Terrain horizon
0.60°
Sun−terrain margin
+6.66°
A solar eclipse is described by four key moments, the contact points between the discs of the Sun and the Moon:
Where the eclipse is only partial, the Moon never fully covers the Sun: only C1 and C4 occur, with no totality in between.
| Peak | Elevation | Distance | Azimuth |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cerro de la Virgen | 837 m | 24.6 km | 74° ENE |
| Ecce-Homo | 836 m | 23.7 km | 75° ENE |
| Cerro del Castillo | 749 m | 17.8 km | 24° NNE |
| Torrelaparada | 746.1 m | 18.8 km | 314° NW |
| La Tortuga | 731 m | 23.4 km | 73° ENE |
| Cerro Almodóvar | 726 m | 4.6 km | 184° S |
| Tambor | 724.3 m | 15.8 km | 308° NW |
| Cerro del Tordo | 716 m | 13.5 km | 36° NE |
Avg. temp.
25.3°C
Max / min
33.3° / 17.2°
Precipitation
10 mm
Storm risk
Medium
Station MADRID AEROPUERTO, 5 km away · Period 1991-2020 · Source: AEMET
P25 — clearer days
0%
Median cloud cover
10%
P75 — cloudier days
78%
Source: ERA5 (ECMWF), 10-year average at the eclipse hour.
Solar eclipses computed from astronomical ephemerides for the city's coordinates.
Yes — Rosas is inside the totality path and the horizon allows the total phase to be fully visible.
Maximum occurs at 20:32 local time (18:32 UTC) in Rosas.
Look WNW (azimuth 283°); the Sun will be 7° above the horizon at maximum from Rosas.
Totality lasts 0 min 1 s in Rosas (C2 to C3).
Rosas will see totality (C2-C3) very close to the western horizon. The partial end (C4) falls below the horizon: you need a clear western view for an epic experience.
Yes, you need ISO 12312-2 certified eclipse glasses during every partial phase. Regular sunglasses do NOT protect. Glasses can only be removed during the totality phase (when the Sun is fully covered); never during annular or partial eclipses. Pages flagged "visible" assume a clear horizon, not a viewing recommendation.
For the August 12 eclipse. Recommended stay: Aug 10–14, 2026.
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<iframe src="https://eclipses.app/embed/widget?lat=40.4275&lon=-3.5943&size=standard&theme=dark&locale=en" width="320" height="340" frameborder="0" loading="lazy" title="Eclipse 2026"></iframe>Share it to help others find out if they'll see the eclipse