On 12 August 2026 the Moon's shadow sweeps across NW Iceland and northern Spain at sunset. Because the eclipsed Sun sits low on the horizon, where you stand really matters — a hill to your west can hide the whole thing.
Umbra maps tens of thousands of real vantage points along the path and rates each one so you can find a spot with a genuinely good view.
HOW SPOTS ARE SCORED
• Sun height above the horizon (highest in the northwest)
• A clear western horizon — terrain that won't block the low Sun (computed from a 30 m elevation model)
• Length of totality
PLAN YOUR TRIP
• Browse the whole path — Iceland and Spain — on an interactive map
• Search any town, or use your location, to find spots nearby
• Filter to the best spots, by quality or how far you'll travel
• See each spot's details: elevation, horizon clearance, parking, crowd estimate — and open it in Google Maps
• Optional overlays: totality duration, Sun angle, contour lines
• A clear-sky weather layer built from ERA5 climatology (long-term August averages), with live-forecast adjustment in the final week
• Eclipse-day countdown to totality at your exact location
Umbra is free to browse. Optional one-time unlocks (Penumbra, Antumbra) add quality scoring, advanced filters, the ranked finder and map overlays. The clear-sky weather layer is free for everyone in the final week before the eclipse.
⚠️ Never look at the Sun without certified ISO 12312-2 eclipse glasses.
Data: OpenStreetMap · Copernicus GLO-30 elevation · ERA5 (ECMWF) climatology.
That description is accurate to the current Penumbra/Antumbra model and the free-weather-week rule.