Atlanta, Georgia Moonrise & Moonset Times
Moonrise
10:21 PM
--
Solar noon
2:16 AM
27.61°
Moonset
7:02 AM
--
Local time: --:--
Current Moon: --
| Moonrise | 10:21 PM | |
|---|---|---|
| Moonset | 7:02 AM | |
| Moon transit | 02:16 | |
| Altitude | 27.61° | |
| Moon phase | 15.8 | |
| Phase Ratio | 98.3% | |
| Next moon phase |
New Moon
14 Jun 00:00
|
First Quarter
21 Jun 00:00
|
|
Full Moon
29 Jun 00:00
|
Third Quarter
8 Jun 00:00
|
|
| Sun | Mon | Tue | Wed | Thu | Fri | Sat |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 15.8 (98.3%) Moonrise 10:21 PM Moonset 7:02 AM | 2 16.8 (95.2%) Moonrise 11:07 PM Moonset 7:55 AM | 3 17.8 (90.4%) Moonrise 11:47 PM Moonset 8:52 AM | 4 18.8 (84.1%) Moonrise Moonset 9:51 AM | 5 19.8 (76.4%) Moonrise 12:23 AM Moonset 10:51 AM | 6 20.8 (67.6%) Moonrise 12:54 AM Moonset 11:51 AM | |
7 21.8 (57.9%) Moonrise 1:22 AM Moonset 12:50 PM | 8 22.8 (47.5%) Third Quarter Moonrise 1:48 AM Moonset 1:51 PM | 9 23.8 (36.9%) Moonrise 2:15 AM Moonset 2:54 PM | 10 24.8 (26.6%) Moonrise 2:43 AM Moonset 4:00 PM | 11 25.8 (17.1%) Moonrise 3:14 AM Moonset 5:10 PM | 12 26.8 (9.2%) Moonrise 3:51 AM Moonset 6:24 PM | 13 27.8 (3.5%) Moonrise 4:35 AM Moonset 7:40 PM |
14 28.8 (0.5%) New Moon Moonrise 5:30 AM Moonset 8:53 PM | 15 0.5 (0.6%) Moonrise 6:36 AM Moonset 9:58 PM | 16 1.5 (3.8%) Moonrise 7:49 AM Moonset 10:52 PM | 17 2.5 (9.6%) Moonrise 9:04 AM Moonset 11:36 PM | 18 3.5 (17.5%) Moonrise 10:17 AM Moonset | 19 Juneteenth National Independence Day 4.5 (26.9%) Moonrise 11:26 AM Moonset 12:12 AM | 20 5.5 (37.1%) Moonrise 12:30 PM Moonset 12:42 AM |
21 6.5 (47.6%) First Quarter Moonrise 1:31 PM Moonset 1:10 AM | 22 7.5 (57.8%) Moonrise 2:31 PM Moonset 1:36 AM | 23 8.5 (67.4%) Moonrise 3:30 PM Moonset 2:02 AM | 24 9.5 (76.2%) Moonrise 4:28 PM Moonset 2:29 AM | 25 10.5 (83.8%) Moonrise 5:28 PM Moonset 2:59 AM | 26 11.5 (90.1%) Moonrise 6:26 PM Moonset 3:34 AM | 27 12.5 (95%) Moonrise 7:23 PM Moonset 4:13 AM |
28 13.5 (98.2%) Moonrise 8:17 PM Moonset 4:58 AM | 29 14.5 (99.8%) Full Moon Moonrise 9:05 PM Moonset 5:50 AM | 30 15.5 (99.5%) Moonrise 9:47 PM Moonset 6:46 AM |
| Date | Moon Age (Illumination) | Moon Phase | Moonrise | Moonset |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/1 (Mon) | 15.8 | 22:21 | 07:02 | |
| 6/2 (Tue) | 16.8 | 23:07 | 07:55 | |
| 6/3 (Wed) | 17.8 | 23:47 | 08:52 | |
| 6/4 (Thu) | 18.8 | 09:51 | ||
| 6/5 (Fri) | 19.8 | 00:23 | 10:51 | |
| 6/6 (Sat) | 20.8 | 00:54 | 11:51 | |
| 6/7 (Sun) | 21.8 | 01:22 | 12:50 | |
| 6/8 (Mon) | 22.8 | Third Quarter | 01:48 | 13:51 |
| 6/9 (Tue) | 23.8 | 02:15 | 14:54 | |
| 6/10 (Wed) | 24.8 | 02:43 | 16:00 | |
| 6/11 (Thu) | 25.8 | 03:14 | 17:10 | |
| 6/12 (Fri) | 26.8 | 03:51 | 18:24 | |
| 6/13 (Sat) | 27.8 | 04:35 | 19:40 | |
| 6/14 (Sun) | 28.8 | New Moon | 05:30 | 20:53 |
| 6/15 (Mon) | 0.5 | 06:36 | 21:58 | |
| 6/16 (Tue) | 1.5 | 07:49 | 22:52 | |
| 6/17 (Wed) | 2.5 | 09:04 | 23:36 | |
| 6/18 (Thu) | 3.5 | 10:17 | ||
| 6/19 (Fri) | 4.5 | 11:26 | 00:12 | |
| 6/20 (Sat) | 5.5 | 12:30 | 00:42 | |
| 6/21 (Sun) | 6.5 | First Quarter | 13:31 | 01:10 |
| 6/22 (Mon) | 7.5 | 14:31 | 01:36 | |
| 6/23 (Tue) | 8.5 | 15:30 | 02:02 | |
| 6/24 (Wed) | 9.5 | 16:28 | 02:29 | |
| 6/25 (Thu) | 10.5 | 17:28 | 02:59 | |
| 6/26 (Fri) | 11.5 | 18:26 | 03:34 | |
| 6/27 (Sat) | 12.5 | 19:23 | 04:13 | |
| 6/28 (Sun) | 13.5 | 20:17 | 04:58 | |
| 6/29 (Mon) | 14.5 | Full Moon | 21:05 | 05:50 |
| 6/30 (Tue) | 15.5 | 21:47 | 06:46 |
Moon Direction
Weather Forecast
Moon and Solar System Planet Positions
200px/AU
About Atlanta
Atlanta, Georgia's capital and largest city, sprawls across the forested ridges of the Piedmont Plateau, where a dense urban canopy of hardwoods and pines creates countless natural frames for the moon as it tracks across the southern sky. Today's moonrise is at 22:21 and moonset at 07:02. On clear evenings the moon emerging above Stone Mountain to the east sends a pale wash over the city's skyline, and the reflective glass towers of Midtown catch and scatter the light like vertical mirrors anchored among the treetops.
Piedmont Park provides a generous expanse of open lawn where the full moon hangs above Lake Clara Meer, its reflection shimmering alongside the illuminated Atlanta skyline in a single panoramic view. The Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area, winding along the city's northwestern edge, offers quieter vantage points where moonlight filters through riverside sycamores and dances on shoals and sandbars. Autumn, when cooler Canadian air sweeps the humidity southward, delivers the sharpest lunar detail — a prime season for bringing a telescope to the open fields at Arabia Mountain and studying the shadowed relief of distant craters.
Knowing when the moon rises and sets adds purpose to evening jogs along the BeltLine, late drives up Kennesaw Mountain for a high-elevation perspective, or after-dinner walks through the Virginia-Highland neighborhood. Atlanta's tree cover, among the densest of any major American city, means the moon often reveals itself in pieces — a glint through magnolia leaves, a full blaze over a parking deck — turning every ordinary commute home into a small, unplanned encounter with the luminous cycles overhead.
Piedmont Park provides a generous expanse of open lawn where the full moon hangs above Lake Clara Meer, its reflection shimmering alongside the illuminated Atlanta skyline in a single panoramic view. The Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area, winding along the city's northwestern edge, offers quieter vantage points where moonlight filters through riverside sycamores and dances on shoals and sandbars. Autumn, when cooler Canadian air sweeps the humidity southward, delivers the sharpest lunar detail — a prime season for bringing a telescope to the open fields at Arabia Mountain and studying the shadowed relief of distant craters.
Knowing when the moon rises and sets adds purpose to evening jogs along the BeltLine, late drives up Kennesaw Mountain for a high-elevation perspective, or after-dinner walks through the Virginia-Highland neighborhood. Atlanta's tree cover, among the densest of any major American city, means the moon often reveals itself in pieces — a glint through magnolia leaves, a full blaze over a parking deck — turning every ordinary commute home into a small, unplanned encounter with the luminous cycles overhead.
Astronomical Events(2026)
Vernal Equinox
Summer Solstice
Autumnal Equinox
Winter Solstice
