Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Moonrise & Moonset Times
Moonrise
10:21 PM
--
Solar noon
2:10 AM
25.87°
Moonset
6:50 AM
--
Local time: --:--
Current Moon: --
| Moonrise | 10:21 PM | |
|---|---|---|
| Moonset | 6:50 AM | |
| Moon transit | 02:10 | |
| Altitude | 25.87° | |
| Moon phase | 15.9 | |
| Phase Ratio | 98.2% | |
| 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 15.9 (98.2%) Moonrise 10:21 PM Moonset 6:50 AM | 2 16.9 (95%) Moonrise 11:06 PM Moonset 7:43 AM | 3 17.9 (90.2%) Moonrise 11:46 PM Moonset 8:41 AM | 4 18.9 (83.8%) Moonrise Moonset 9:41 AM | 5 19.9 (76.1%) Moonrise 12:20 AM Moonset 10:42 AM | 6 20.9 (67.2%) Moonrise 12:50 AM Moonset 11:43 AM | |
7 21.9 (57.4%) Moonrise 1:17 AM Moonset 12:44 PM | 8 22.9 (47.1%) Third Quarter Moonrise 1:43 AM Moonset 1:46 PM | 9 23.9 (36.5%) Moonrise 2:08 AM Moonset 2:49 PM | 10 24.9 (26.2%) Moonrise 2:35 AM Moonset 3:57 PM | 11 25.9 (16.8%) Moonrise 3:05 AM Moonset 5:08 PM | 12 26.9 (8.9%) Moonrise 3:41 AM Moonset 6:24 PM | 13 27.9 (3.3%) Moonrise 4:24 AM Moonset 7:41 PM |
14 28.9 (0.4%) New Moon Moonrise 5:19 AM Moonset 8:54 PM | 15 0.6 (0.7%) Moonrise 6:24 AM Moonset 9:59 PM | 16 1.6 (3.9%) Moonrise 7:38 AM Moonset 10:51 PM | 17 2.6 (9.9%) Moonrise 8:55 AM Moonset 11:34 PM | 18 3.6 (17.9%) Moonrise 10:09 AM Moonset | 19 Juneteenth National Independence Day 4.6 (27.3%) Moonrise 11:18 AM Moonset 12:08 AM | 20 5.6 (37.6%) Moonrise 12:24 PM Moonset 12:37 AM |
21 6.6 (48%) First Quarter Moonrise 1:26 PM Moonset 1:03 AM | 22 7.6 (58.2%) Moonrise 2:27 PM Moonset 1:28 AM | 23 8.6 (67.8%) Moonrise 3:27 PM Moonset 1:53 AM | 24 9.6 (76.5%) Moonrise 4:27 PM Moonset 2:20 AM | 25 10.6 (84.1%) Moonrise 5:27 PM Moonset 2:49 AM | 26 11.6 (90.4%) Moonrise 6:26 PM Moonset 3:22 AM | 27 12.6 (95.2%) Moonrise 7:24 PM Moonset 4:01 AM |
28 13.6 (98.3%) Moonrise 8:17 PM Moonset 4:47 AM | 29 14.6 (99.8%) Full Moon Moonrise 9:05 PM Moonset 5:38 AM | 30 15.6 (99.4%) Moonrise 9:46 PM Moonset 6:35 AM |
| Date | Moon Age (Illumination) | Moon Phase | Moonrise | Moonset |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/1 (Mon) | 15.9 | 22:21 | 06:50 | |
| 6/2 (Tue) | 16.9 | 23:06 | 07:43 | |
| 6/3 (Wed) | 17.9 | 23:46 | 08:41 | |
| 6/4 (Thu) | 18.9 | 09:41 | ||
| 6/5 (Fri) | 19.9 | 00:20 | 10:42 | |
| 6/6 (Sat) | 20.9 | 00:50 | 11:43 | |
| 6/7 (Sun) | 21.9 | 01:17 | 12:44 | |
| 6/8 (Mon) | 22.9 | Third Quarter | 01:43 | 13:46 |
| 6/9 (Tue) | 23.9 | 02:08 | 14:49 | |
| 6/10 (Wed) | 24.9 | 02:35 | 15:57 | |
| 6/11 (Thu) | 25.9 | 03:05 | 17:08 | |
| 6/12 (Fri) | 26.9 | 03:41 | 18:24 | |
| 6/13 (Sat) | 27.9 | 04:24 | 19:41 | |
| 6/14 (Sun) | 28.9 | New Moon | 05:19 | 20:54 |
| 6/15 (Mon) | 0.6 | 06:24 | 21:59 | |
| 6/16 (Tue) | 1.6 | 07:38 | 22:51 | |
| 6/17 (Wed) | 2.6 | 08:55 | 23:34 | |
| 6/18 (Thu) | 3.6 | 10:09 | ||
| 6/19 (Fri) | 4.6 | 11:18 | 00:08 | |
| 6/20 (Sat) | 5.6 | 12:24 | 00:37 | |
| 6/21 (Sun) | 6.6 | First Quarter | 13:26 | 01:03 |
| 6/22 (Mon) | 7.6 | 14:27 | 01:28 | |
| 6/23 (Tue) | 8.6 | 15:27 | 01:53 | |
| 6/24 (Wed) | 9.6 | 16:27 | 02:20 | |
| 6/25 (Thu) | 10.6 | 17:27 | 02:49 | |
| 6/26 (Fri) | 11.6 | 18:26 | 03:22 | |
| 6/27 (Sat) | 12.6 | 19:24 | 04:01 | |
| 6/28 (Sun) | 13.6 | 20:17 | 04:47 | |
| 6/29 (Mon) | 14.6 | Full Moon | 21:05 | 05:38 |
| 6/30 (Tue) | 15.6 | 21:46 | 06:35 |
Moon Direction
Weather Forecast
Moon and Solar System Planet Positions
200px/AU
About Oklahoma City
Oklahoma City, the capital of Oklahoma, sprawls across the broad, level terrain of the Cross Timbers transition zone where eastern woodlands fade into western prairie, and the immense sky overhead ensures the moon dominates the landscape from the moment it breaks the horizon. Today's moonrise is at 22:21 and moonset at 06:50. On clear evenings the moon ascending from the eastern flatlands carries a deep amber warmth that mellows to polished ivory as it climbs, its glow washing over the dome of the Capitol — one of the few in the nation topped by a working oil derrick — and reflecting off the Oklahoma River in a corridor of trembling light.
The Oklahoma River trails and boathouses along the south side of the city provide a waterfront stage where the full moon mirrors itself in the engineered channel, and the surrounding bridges — each architecturally distinct — frame the orb in geometric silhouettes. Lake Hefner, on the city's northwest side, acts as an enormous reflective surface that captures the moon and the surrounding sunset-to-dusk color transitions in a single, sweeping panorama. November through February, when dry continental air from the high plains replaces the Gulf moisture, brings the clearest skies and the most detailed views — conditions that reward telescope users at the parks along the lake's eastern shore.
Tracking moonrise and moonset times enriches planning for evening rowing sessions on the Oklahoma River, late drives through the Wichita Mountains Wildlife Refuge southwest of the metro, or sunset-to-moonrise cookouts at Lake Thunderbird State Park. Oklahoma's unobstructed horizon means the moon spends more time near the edge of the sky than in most states, its apparent size magnified by atmospheric refraction — a nightly optical gift that turns the simple act of stepping outside into a direct encounter with the measureless scale of the prairie sky.
The Oklahoma River trails and boathouses along the south side of the city provide a waterfront stage where the full moon mirrors itself in the engineered channel, and the surrounding bridges — each architecturally distinct — frame the orb in geometric silhouettes. Lake Hefner, on the city's northwest side, acts as an enormous reflective surface that captures the moon and the surrounding sunset-to-dusk color transitions in a single, sweeping panorama. November through February, when dry continental air from the high plains replaces the Gulf moisture, brings the clearest skies and the most detailed views — conditions that reward telescope users at the parks along the lake's eastern shore.
Tracking moonrise and moonset times enriches planning for evening rowing sessions on the Oklahoma River, late drives through the Wichita Mountains Wildlife Refuge southwest of the metro, or sunset-to-moonrise cookouts at Lake Thunderbird State Park. Oklahoma's unobstructed horizon means the moon spends more time near the edge of the sky than in most states, its apparent size magnified by atmospheric refraction — a nightly optical gift that turns the simple act of stepping outside into a direct encounter with the measureless scale of the prairie sky.
Astronomical Events(2026)
Vernal Equinox
Summer Solstice
Autumnal Equinox
Winter Solstice
