| Current Time: | 22 fév 2026, 09 h 52 m 12 |
|---|---|
| Moon Direction: | ↑ 70° East |
| Moon Altitude: | 8,0° |
| Moon Distance: | 371 286 km |
| Next Full Moon: | 3 mar 2026, 03 h 37 |
| Next New Moon: | 18 mar 2026, 18 h 23 |
| Next Moonset: | Tomorrow, 00 h 55 |
Moonrise, Moonset, and Phase Calendar for Vancouver, novembre 2026
Scroll right to see more
| 2026 | Moonrise/Moonset | Meridian Passing | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| nov | Moonrise | Moonset | Moonrise | Time | Distance (km) | Illumination | ||||
| - | 13 h 53 | ↑ (300°) | 23 h 17 | ↑ (63°) | 06 h 03 | (60,9°) | 371 747 | 53,1% | ||
| 2 | - | 14 h 14 | ↑ (291°) | - | 06 h 55 | (55,6°) | 375 208 | 41,6% | ||
| 3 | 00 h 38 | ↑ (73°) | 14 h 31 | ↑ (282°) | - | 07 h 43 | (49,5°) | 378 828 | 30,7% | |
| 4 | 01 h 55 | ↑ (83°) | 14 h 46 | ↑ (272°) | - | 08 h 29 | (43,2°) | 382 475 | 21,0% | |
| 5 | 03 h 11 | ↑ (93°) | 15 h 01 | ↑ (263°) | - | 09 h 13 | (36,8°) | 386 082 | 12,9% | |
| 6 | 04 h 25 | ↑ (102°) | 15 h 16 | ↑ (254°) | - | 09 h 57 | (30,7°) | 389 615 | 6,6% | |
| 7 | 05 h 39 | ↑ (111°) | 15 h 32 | ↑ (245°) | - | 10 h 41 | (25,1°) | 393 046 | 2,5% | |
| 06 h 53 | ↑ (120°) | 15 h 53 | ↑ (238°) | - | 11 h 27 | (20,2°) | 396 321 | 0,4% | ||
| 9 | 08 h 06 | ↑ (127°) | 16 h 18 | ↑ (231°) | - | 12 h 16 | (16,4°) | 399 346 | 0,5% | |
| 10 | 09 h 16 | ↑ (132°) | 16 h 51 | ↑ (227°) | - | 13 h 06 | (13,7°) | 401 977 | 2,6% | |
| 11 | 10 h 19 | ↑ (135°) | 17 h 34 | ↑ (225°) | - | 13 h 57 | (12,4°) | 404 032 | 6,6% | |
| 12 | 11 h 12 | ↑ (135°) | 18 h 28 | ↑ (225°) | - | 14 h 49 | (12,4°) | 405 303 | 12,2% | |
| 13 | 11 h 53 | ↑ (133°) | 19 h 30 | ↑ (228°) | - | 15 h 39 | (13,8°) | 405 588 | 19,2% | |
| 14 | 12 h 25 | ↑ (129°) | 20 h 37 | ↑ (233°) | - | 16 h 28 | (16,4°) | 404 721 | 27,4% | |
| 15 | 12 h 50 | ↑ (123°) | 21 h 47 | ↑ (240°) | - | 17 h 14 | (20,1°) | 402 599 | 36,5% | |
| 16 | 13 h 09 | ↑ (115°) | 22 h 58 | ↑ (248°) | - | 17 h 58 | (24,8°) | 399 204 | 46,2% | |
| 13 h 25 | ↑ (107°) | - | - | 18 h 41 | (30,1°) | 394 626 | 56,2% | |||
| 18 | - | 00 h 09 | ↑ (257°) | 13 h 40 | ↑ (98°) | 19 h 24 | (36,0°) | 389 072 | 66,3% | |
| 19 | - | 01 h 22 | ↑ (266°) | 13 h 54 | ↑ (89°) | 20 h 07 | (42,2°) | 382 876 | 76,0% | |
| 20 | - | 02 h 36 | ↑ (276°) | 14 h 09 | ↑ (80°) | 20 h 53 | (48,6°) | 376 483 | 84,7% | |
| 21 | - | 03 h 54 | ↑ (286°) | 14 h 26 | ↑ (70°) | 21 h 42 | (54,8°) | 370 426 | 92,0% | |
| 22 | - | 05 h 17 | ↑ (296°) | 14 h 48 | ↑ (61°) | 22 h 36 | (60,4°) | 365 267 | 97,2% | |
| 23 | - | 06 h 44 | ↑ (304°) | 15 h 17 | ↑ (53°) | 23 h 36 | (64,8°) | 361 527 | 99,7% | |
| - | 08 h 12 | ↑ (311°) | 15 h 58 | ↑ (47°) | Moon does not pass the meridian on this day. | |||||
| 25 | - | 09 h 32 | ↑ (315°) | 16 h 55 | ↑ (45°) | 00 h 41 | (67,5°) | 359 584 | 99,0% | |
| 26 | - | 10 h 36 | ↑ (314°) | 18 h 10 | ↑ (47°) | 01 h 48 | (67,9°) | 359 597 | 95,1% | |
| 27 | - | 11 h 22 | ↑ (310°) | 19 h 35 | ↑ (53°) | 02 h 53 | (66,1°) | 361 460 | 88,4% | |
| 28 | - | 11 h 55 | ↑ (302°) | 21 h 02 | ↑ (61°) | 03 h 54 | (62,3°) | 364 843 | 79,4% | |
| 29 | - | 12 h 19 | ↑ (294°) | 22 h 26 | ↑ (70°) | 04 h 50 | (57,2°) | 369 289 | 68,9% | |
| - | 12 h 37 | ↑ (284°) | 23 h 45 | ↑ (80°) | 05 h 41 | (51,2°) | 374 318 | 57,6% | ||
| * All times are local time for Vancouver. They take into account refraction. Dates are based on the Gregorian calendar. Illumination is calculated at lunar noon. | ||||||||||
Note that Daylight Saving Time ends on dimanche 1 novembre 2026, 02 h 00, and this is accounted for above.
jan | fév | mar | avr | mai | juin | juil | aoû | sep | oct | nov | déc
Elsewhere on timeanddate.com
Why 2026 Might Be an Exciting Year for Auroras
Aurora expert Vincent Ledvina reveals why 2026 may bring more predictable viewing—plus a chance of rare extreme events.
US Eyes Permanent “Half-Daylight Saving Time”
A new US bill aims to turn clocks ahead by 30 minutes, leaving Americans halfway between standard time and DST.
Moon Guide for February 2026
Discover the phases of the Moon in February 2026. Also: Will the crew of Artemis II fly around the Moon in February?
How Often Do Eclipses Happen? Old Question, New Data
A timeanddate.com study to be published in the Journal of the British Astronomical Association applies modern computing power to an ancient puzzle.